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Query: UMLS:C0036690 (
sepsis
)
59,461
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Indices of nutritional state were measured in 105 surgical patients. The indices were chosen to give information on protein-calorie malnutrition, anaemia, vitamin deficiency. Abnormal values for the various indices were common in the group as a whole and most frequent (50%) in patients who were still in hospital more than a week after major surgery. These patients had a high frequency of anaemia, vitamin deficiency, weight-loss, loss of arm-muscle bulk, and low plasma levels of transferrin and
albumin
. These abnormalities had gone almost entirely unrecognised, even in patients with
sepsis
after major surgery, who would benefit from improvement in nutritional state.
...
PMID:Malnutrition in surgical patients. An unrecognised problem. 6 85
Anticomplementary activity, aggregate content, and elimination of i.v. human gamma globulin (HGG). During storage of HGG globulin aggregate formation increases leading to anticomplementary activity. Seventeen patients suffering from postoperative
sepsis
showed significantly faster elimination rates of HGG than 6 healthy controls, while there was no difference in
albumin
elimination.
...
PMID:[Immunologic properties, aggregate content and half-life of various human i.v. gamma globulin preparations]. 7 97
A model was developed in the rhesus monkey to determine if the marked wasting of body proteins associated with
sepsis
could be prevented by an intravenous supply of various nutritional substrates. All monkeys were given a basic infusion of 0.5 gm of amino acid nitrogen/kg body weight via an indwelling catheter in the jugular vein. Three groups were given diets with no added calories, 85 calories/kg from dextrose or 85 calories from lipid. In each group, six monkeys were inoculated with 3 x 10(8) Streptococcus pneumoniae and four with heatkilled organisms. In the monkeys infused with the amino acids alone, pneumococcal
sepsis
resulted in a fourfold increase in loss of body proteins compared with calorie-restricted controls. Addition of 85 calories/kg/day of either dextrose or lipid reduced body wasting associated with infectious disease. The calories from lipid were utilized bythe septic host as a source of energy, with a slightly reduced efficiency when compared with the isocaloric infusion of dextrose. The nitrogen sparing of the fat emulsion could not be accounted for by its glycerol content. Therefore, the septic monkey seemed to utilize fatty acids as an energy substrate. It appears that the carbohydrate calories tend to favor the synthesis of peripheral proteins (associated mainly with skeletal muscle), while lipid calories favor synthesis of visceral proteins such as plasma
albumin
and acute-phase proteins.
...
PMID:Protein-sparing therapy during pneumococcal infection in rhesus monkeys. 10 60
Seventeen pediatric patients, ages 9.25--20.5 yr, were placed on a program of home parenteral nutrition (HPN) for severe, symptomatic Crohn's disease. Prior therapy with sulfasalazine in 14, adrenocorticosteroids in 12, inpatient total parenteral nutrition in 7, and/or surgical resections in 6 failed to suppress disease activity. Remission was attained in 12 of the 17 after one course of HPN alone. Four patients had surgical procedures and 1 required steroids in addition to HPN. Remissions have been maintained in 4 of those 12 for a mean duration of 315 days after discontinuation of HPN. Of the 8 who relapsed after a mean duration of 68 days, second courses of HPN were undertaken in 7 and third courses in 2. All 17 had a marked improvement in disease symptoms while receiving HPN in addition to gaining weight sufficient to place them at a higher percentile on standard growth charts. Ten patients demonstrated "catch-up" growth and 4 others increased their height appropriately. A chromium 51-labeled
albumin
stool collection of greater than 1% in 5 of 7 patients at the completion of a HPN course correlated with relapse within 4 mo. Serial radiographic contrast studies and erythrocyte sedimentation rates were not predictive of prolonged remissions. Home parenteral nutrition complications were minimal, with only one episode of
sepsis
per 5.8 catheter experience years. It is concluded that HPN is a safe and effective means of inducing remissions and providing optimal nutritional support in pediatric patients with severe Crohn's disease. Patients with less than adequate response to standard medical management should be considered candidates for this therapeutic modality.
...
PMID:Home parenteral nutrition in children with Crohn's disease: an effective management alternative. 10 47
Plasma proteins, triglyceridemia, body composition and delayed hypersensitivity were determined in 154 critically ill patients after admission. Plasma proteins levels were significantly increased in patients that were subsequently discharged vs. those that died:
albumin
: 33 +/- 6 g/l vs 28 +/- 6 g/l (p < 10(-6)); transferrin 2,18 +/- 0,65 g/l vs. 1,54 +/0 0,55 g/l (p < 10(-7)); prealbumin: 14,32 +/- 7,79 mg/100 ml vs. 7,28 +/-5,36 mg/100 ml (p < 10(-7)) and triglyceridemia was decreased: 1,07 +/- 0,38 g/l vs. 1,66 +/- 1,12 g/l (p not equal to 10(-3)). Body weight, fat weight and lead body mass were not correlated to subsequent mortality. Muscle cell mass was decreased (-17%, p < 10(-2)) and extracellular water was increased (+14%, p < 10(-4)), in patients who subsequently died. Total body water and visceral cell mass did not change. Initial anergy (tested with 3 antigens: candidin, tuberculin, varidase) did correlate with mortality: 35/62 died when delayed hypersensitivity was negative vs. 13/71 when it was positive (p < 10(-4)). Mortality was associated with decreased total lymphocyte count: 884 +/- 1025 vs. 1270 +/- 870 (p < 0,02) and serum iron: 51 +/- 40 micrograms/100 ml vs. 74 +/- 45 micrograms/100 ml (p < 10(-2)).
Sepsis
correlated with mortality (p < 10(-3)) and could produce these changes. These results suggest that critically ill paients have a protein-calorie malnutrition syndrom marktly different from that observed in simple starvation. Nutritional therapy must be, in this group of patients, adapted to this concept.
...
PMID:[Nutritional status in critically ill patients. Relationship with mortality (author's transl)]. 12 28
Replacement of glucose and
albumin
in ten patients after hepatic lobectomy shows that hypoglycemia and hypoalbuminemia, the two most common consequences of lobectomy in animals, can be prevented in man. Biosynthesis of protein, cholesterol, and prothrombin are reduced temporarily. In patients having emergency lobectomy, the serum bilirubin and glutamic oxaloacetic transaminase concentrations are statistically greater than in patients having elective lobectomy. Serum ammonia is not elevated and bromsulphalein excretion is normal after bilirubin returns to less than 1 mg/100 ml. Lactic dehydrogenase concentrations in serum are increased and fluctuate in the presence of
sepsis
or respiratory insufficiency: Mean creatine phosphokinase peaks at concentrations higher than those reported in acute myocardial infarction and returns to normal in three days. Compensatory hyperplasia of the residual lobe occurred in all patients.
...
PMID:Physiologic consequences of hepatic lobectomy in man. 16 98
Blood volume was estimated using 51chromium labelled red cells and 125iodinated human serum albumin in 5 children with
sepsis
, in 6 burned children and 7 children with acute lymphoblastic leukaemia. Studies of the equilibration pattern demonstrated that the mixing time of labelled red cells was prolonged to 40 minutes or more in 5 children, indicating the existence of slowly circulating red cells. Mixing of labelled
albumin
was complete within 10 minutes in 15 patients and within 20 minutes in all the children studied. In a burned patient with severe
sepsis
, exchange transfusion improved the clinical state and normalized the equilibration pattern of labelled red cells. The mean body/venous haematocrit ratio was 0.893+/-0.018 (SD) in the children with
sepsis
, 0.859+/-0.052 in the burned patients, and 0.916+/-0.078 in the children with acute lymphoblastic leukaemia, increasing with spleen size in the latter group.
...
PMID:Accuracy of blood volume estimations in critically ill children using 125I-labelled albumin and 51Cr-labelled red cells. 26 10
The unexplained occurrence of thrombocytopenia in cases of Gramnegative
sepsis
in man led us, in the light of animal experiments indicating the blood platelet as the target cell for endotoxin, to examine the effect of Salmonella enteritidis lipopolysaccharide B on human platelets. Human platelets were separated from a coat of plasma proteins by Sepharose 2B filtration or by a combined procedure of
albumin
gradient and Sepharose 2B filtration. The action of endotoxin on human platelets resulted in membrane changes manifested by dose-dependent release of [3H]serotonin and adenine nucleotides. Cytoplasmic marker, lactic dehydrogenase, and lysosomal marker, beta glucuronidase, were retained indicating that the release reaction was selective. Release of [3H]serotonin was specific for endotoxin since other particulates, zymosan and erythrocyte stroma, were without effect. Endotoxin, added to gel-filtered human platelets, induced a significant evolution of platelet factor 3 procoagulant activity. Preincubation of endotoxin with a membrane-rich homogenate of human platelets inhibited its labilizing effect on human platelets thus suggesting an interaction between endotoxin and the platelet membrane itself. Other plausible factors in this interaction [fibrinogen, adenine nucleotides, thrombin, sialic acid residues, and IgG] were eliminated on the basis of a series of control experiments. From the negligible effect of aspirin and indomethacin, we may infer that the interaction of endotoxin with platelets does not depend on the platelet prostaglandin synthesis pathway. The direct interaction of endotoxin with the human platelet membrane comprises a new mechanism which may help to clarify the pathogenesis of vascular and haemostatic disorders accompanying bloodstream infections due to Gram-negative bacteria.
...
PMID:Membrane changes in human platelets induced by lipopolysaccharide endotoxin. 32 97
The intranasal inoculation of adult mice with saline suspensions of virulent group B streptococci serotype Ia resulted in
septicemia
which was lethal. Decreasing the inoculation dose of streptotocci increased the time required for their appearance in the blood and the mean time to death of the mice. Before the appearance of
septicemia
, the number of organisms in the lungs decreased to about 1% of the inoculation dose, and the majority could be recovered by lavage of the lungs through the trachea. In contrast, most of the organisms remained in the lavaged lungs of bacteremic mice after intranasal or intravenous inoculation. Lung surfactant obtained from infected mice was altered by a reduction in lipid and by an increase in protein. The organisms in vitro did not attack surfactant lipid labeled with [1-14C]palmitic acid, but their pathogenesis in vivo affected the permeability of the air-blood barrier, as shown by the leakage into the air spaces of plasma
albumin
labeled by the intravenous injection of Evans blue dye.
...
PMID:Group B streptococcal type Ia sepsis in mice after intranasal inoculation and the effect of infection on lungs. 38 6
During caloric deprivation, the septic host may fail to develop ketonemia as an adaptation to starvation. Because the plasma ketone body concentration is a function of the ratio of hepatic production and peripheral usage, a pneumococcal
sepsis
model was used in rats to measure the complex metabolic events that could account for this failure, including the effects of infection on lipolysis and esterification in adipose tissue, fatty acid transport in plasma and the rates of hepatic ketogenesis and whole body oxidation of ketones. Some of the studies were repeated with tularemia as the model infection. From these studies, it was concluded that during pneumococcal
sepsis
, the failure of rats to become ketonemic during caloric deprivation was the result of reduced ketogenic capacity of the liver and a possibly decreased hepatic supply of fatty acids. The latter appeared to be a secondary consequence of a severe reduction in circulating plasma
albumin
, the major transport protein for fatty acids, with no effect on the degree of saturation of the
albumin
with free fatty acids. Also, the infection had no significant effect on the rate of lipolysis or release of fatty acids from adipose tissue. Ketone body usage (oxidation) was either unaffected or reduced during pneumococcal
sepsis
in rats. Thus, a reduced rate of ketone production in the infected host was primarily responsible for the failure to develop starvation ketonemia under these conditions. The liver of the infected rat host appears to shuttle the fatty acids away from beta-oxidation and ketogenesis and toward triglyceride production, with resulting hepatocellular fatty metamorphosis.
...
PMID:Role of the liver in regulation of ketone body production during sepsis. 50 Aug 25
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