Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0036690 (
sepsis
)
59,461
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We report a 21-year-old male patient suffering from acute myeloid leukemia and concomitant thrombocytopenia. Following a diagnostic thoracotomy-which revealed Aspergillus pneumonia-he developed respiratory insufficiency and
dyspnea
. A thoracic epidural catheter was inserted and epidural morphine treatment led to improved ventilation. No clinical signs of pathological epidural processes were noticed during the treatment. The patient died of Aspergillus
sepsis
26 days after catheter insertion. Autopsy revealed bacterial growth in the epidural space with slight infectious tissue reactions as well as an epidural hematoma. No evidence of spinal cord compression was found at autopsy. The development of epidural infection or hematoma seems to be a possible complication of epidural analgesia in patients suffering from impaired defense mechanisms or thrombocytopenia. These risk factors should be taken into account when epidural analgesia is considered. We suggest that the platelet count should be determined beforehand in patients suspected of having thrombocytopenia (e.g. cancer, pre-eclampsia).
...
PMID:[Epidural hematoma following epidural catheter anesthesia in thrombocytopenia]. 335 26
Two controversial issues of neonatal transfusion practices, erythrocyte 'booster' transfusions and granulocyte transfusions, are critically reviewed, and current recommendations for transfusion practices are made. Infants should receive erythrocyte transfusions to treat congestive heart failure caused primarily by anemia. It is customary to maintain the hematocrit at greater than 40% in neonates with severe respiratory disease, although the efficacy of this practice has not been firmly established. Erythrocyte transfusions seem to be indicated for infants with anemia plus recurrent apnea, poor weight gain or the syndrome of tachycardia, tachypnea,
dyspnea
and poor feeding for which no other cause can be found. Granulocyte transfusions are likely to benefit seriously ill neonates exhibiting all three of the following: strong evidence of bacterial
sepsis
, neutropenia (compared to age-related normal values) and a diminished marrow neutrophil storage pool. Granulocyte transfusions for septic infants expressing only one or two of these features should be considered to be experimental therapy.
...
PMID:Current issues in neonatal transfusions. 352 25
The clinical, pathomorphological and microbiological findings during meat inspection in 599 pigs with endocarditis at slaughter were studied. Clinical signs were observed in 41 per cent of the pigs on ante-mortem inspection. Lameness was the most common sign. However, this symptom is not very specific of endocarditis. This is also true of various other symptoms. Only
dyspnoea
and drowsiness were indicative of endocarditis to some extent, but occurred only sporadically. Extracardial lesions were observed in 66 per cent of the pigs with endocarditis on post-mortem inspection. Metastatic processes (infarction or inflammatory foci) were most frequently detected in the kidneys. These were highly specific of endocarditis. In addition, the following changes were observed in decreasing incidence: signs of
sepsis
(hyperplastic splenitis, petechiae and degradation of organs), inflammatory lesions of the joints and legs, metastatic pneumonia and inflammation of the tail. Bacteriological examination was positive in 62 per cent of the cases. Streptococci were the organisms most frequently isolated (36 per cent), followed by Corynebacterium pyogenes (19 per cent) and Erysipelothrix rhusiopathiae (14 per cent). The discussion is concerned with the significance of these bacteria to meat-consumers.
...
PMID:[Endocarditis and meat inspection in slaughtering pigs. 1. Clinical, pathological and microbiological aspects]. 368 3
The early and late results were retrospectively evaluated in 57 cases of double or triple valve replacement or repair performed in 1970-1983. The causes of the valvular lesions were rheumatic fever (43 cases), bacterial endocarditis (6), syphilis (1) and unknown (7 cases). The preoperative NYHA classification was III in 29 patients and IV in 28, due mainly to
dyspnea
of effort. Cardiomegaly (mean radiologic volume 880 cm3/m2) and atrial fibrillation were the dominant clinical findings. Surgery was on emergency indications in five cases. Cold cardioplegia combined with external cardiac cooling has been used for myocardial protection since 1977. The valve replacements were 56 aortic, 50 mitral and 2 tricuspid. In addition there were three closed and two open mitral commissurotomies, two mitral plastic repairs, three tricuspid valve anuloplasties (DeVega) and one aortic anuloplasty. Follow-up (0.3-13, mean 3.5 years) was supplemented with a check-up including two-dimensional echophonocardiography and hematologic tests. The operative mortality (10/57 patients) fell from 26% in 1970-1976 to 12% in 1977-1983. The causes of death were low cardiac output in preoperatively ill patients (5), myocardial infarction (2), technical failure (2) and
sepsis
(1 case). There were 11 late deaths (6.7/100 patient-years of observation), the commonest cause (5 patients) being congestive heart failure. The respective incidences of thromboembolism, paravalvular leak and postoperative endocarditis were 2.1, 4.2 and 2.1 episodes/100 patient-years.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Combined multiple-valve procedures. Factors influencing the early and late results. 401 39
We describe the case of a 58-year-old man who presented to the hospital with central abdominal pain, nausea, fever, chills, and
dyspnea
. While in the hospital, jaundice appeared and the liver function tests revealed features of both cholestasis and hepatocellular injury. He developed gram-negative
septicemia
and died on the sixth hospital day. Autopsy disclosed a perforated terminal ileal diverticulum and a contiguous mesenteric abscess. There was also severe phlebitis of mesenteric venous radicles which extended superiorly to the intrahepatic portal venules and veins. The portal veins were surrounded by multiple hepatic abscesses that varied in size from microscopic to 2.5 cm. This appears to be the first report in the world literature of suppurative pylephlebitis and hepatic abscesses resulting from a perforated ileal diverticulum. The subject of small bowel non-Meckelian diverticulosis is reviewed because of the rarity of this condition and the diagnostic challenges it poses.
...
PMID:Perforated diverticulum of the terminal ileum. A previously unreported cause of suppurative pylephlebitis and multiple hepatic abscesses. 642 54
Mycoplasma mycoides subspecies mycoides (large-colony type) was isolated from the lungs of a goat with pneumonia. Clinical signs included inappetence, weakness, listlessness, coughing,
dyspnea
, pyrexia, slight nasal discharge, and lameness. Tylosin (4 mg/kg of body weight) was administered each day for 4 days, resulting in slow recovery. Three weeks later, the clinical signs recurred and the kid was anemic. It was given a single blood transfusion and tylosin was administered daily. The kid's health status was steadily declined and it died after 6 days' treatment. At necropsy, the lungs were edematous and congested. Histopathologic findings were those of
septicemia
and pneumonia.
...
PMID:Pneumonia in goats caused by Mycoplasma mycoides subspecies mycoides. 700 31
Bronchopulmonary infections with Aspergillus give rise to three different pathological entities. Allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis, found in patients with an atopic predisposition, is marked by
dyspnea
of the asthmatic type associated with labile radiologically detectable infiltrates, blood hypereosinophilia, enhanced total IgE levels, specific IgG fractions, and positive immediate reactions to skin tests. The long-term risk is the development of proximal bronchiectasis. Dosage and duration of corticotherapy are function of eosinophilia and total IgE levels. Pathogenicity is similar to that of extrinsic allergic alveolitis, probably involving disturbances in immune complexes from a type I reaction. Intracavital pulmonary aspergillosis involves mycotic development within a cavity or a complicating parenchymatous lesion. Severe hemoptysis may occur. Medical treatment is ineffective, and radical surgery is necessary in patients able to support operative procedures, which vary as a function of the condition of the patient. Diffuse aspergillosis occurs in immunodeficient patients, usually during the acute phase of chemotherapy induction. Spread of the disease is either from the upper respiratory tract or through the blood as
septicemia
. A nosocomial origin is frequent. Diagnosis depends more on the presence of hyphae in tissue biopsy specimens than cultures or serological tests which are too unreliable. Treatment is with amphotericin B preferably associated with 5 fluorocytosin.
...
PMID:[Bronchopulmonary aspergillosis (author's transl)]. 708 69
Amphotericin B is used increasingly in high-risk patients with profound neutropenia and suspected
sepsis
. We have observed serious pulmonary reactions characterized by acute
dyspnea
, hypoxemia, and interstitial infiltrates on chest films in patients receiving amphotericin B and leukocyte transfusions. We reviewed 6 1/2 years of experience at the National Institutes of Health to determine whether this combination was associated with pulmonary toxicity not characteristic of either therapy alone. Amphotericin was used during 22 of 57 leukocyte-transfusion courses. Acute respiratory deterioration occurred during 14 (64 per cent) of these courses but in only two (6 per cent) of 35 courses without amphotericin (P less than 0.01). In seven cases, respiratory deterioration began during or immediately after amphotericin infusion, and it contributed to death in five patients. Diffuse intraalveolar hemorrhage was found when lung biopsy or autopsy was performed. Acute respiratory deterioration was not observed in comparably neutropenic patients given amphotericin but not leukocyte transfusions during the same period. It was mot common when amphotericin was begun with or after institution of daily leukocyte transfusions. Leukocyte transfusions may cause changes in the lungs that amplify the acute toxicity of amphotericin, thereby permitting severe pulmonary reactions.
...
PMID:Lethal pulmonary reactions associated with the combined use of amphotericin B and leukocyte transfusions. 721 59
During an 18-year period, 501 cases of thoracic complications of amebic abscess of the liver were studied; 175 had inflammatory reactions of thoracic structures (165 with pleural effusions and pneumonitis, ten with pericarditis) and 326 ruptured through the diaphragm (175 into the airways, 106 into the pleural cavity, 5 into the pericardium, 39 into the airways and pleura, and 1 into the pleura and pericardium). The thoracic complication was preceded by a picture suggesting an acute inflammatory process or a chronic wasting disease. Depending on type, the complication itself was signaled by increase or change in character of right upper abdominal or lower thoracic pain,
dyspnea
, or overt respiratory insufficiency, hemoptysis, and expectoration of necrotic material,
sepsis
, tamponade, and shock. Chest roentgenograms showed small to massive pleural effusions, basal pneumonitis, and cardiomegaly; serology, liver scans, and induced pneumoperitoneum were diagnostic. Treatment included metronidazole and emetine, drainage of pleural or pericardial contents or promotion of bronchial drainage, and meticulous care of associated respiratory, circulatory, and systemic derangements. Mortality for cases with rupture was 11.4 percent, due mainly to
sepsis
, shock, respiratory insufficiency, and tamponade. The rest of the patients were discharged in cured or improved condition.
...
PMID:Thoracic complications of amebic abscess of the liver: report of 501 cases. 722 56
A 63-year-old man admitted to our hospital because of
dyspnea
and inspiratory stridor. The X-ray computed tomography and angiogram revealed tracheal stenosis due to compression by aortic arch aneurysm of retroesophageal right aortic arch. His face was congenitally asymmetrical, and he also showed anotia, and meatal atresia. In the operation, we approached the aneurysm via median sternotomy and left thoracotomy by the 3rd intercostal space, and found atretic left aortic arch in front of trachea. So, operative diagnosis was Edwards Ib complete vascular ring associated with right aortic arch aneurysm. The aneurysm was incised and the arch and its branches were reconstructed with vascular prosthesis under ECC using selective cerebral perfusion. Postoperatively, until 5th postoperative day his condition was uneventful, and he was neurologically almost normal. But on the 5th postoperative day, his hemodynamics suddenly deteriorated because of severe pneumonia and
septicemia
. On the 6th postoperative day, he died in spite of earnest resuscitation. We could not find any previous reports about this rare combination of diseases.
...
PMID:[A case report of tracheal stenosis due to true aortic arch aneurysm of retroesophageal right aortic arch associated with so called vascular ring-facial syndrome]. 756 21
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>