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Query: UMLS:C0036690 (sepsis)
59,461 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Five cases of childhood pyogenic hepatic abscess at Milwaukee Children's Hospital and 61 cases in the literature were reviewed. Hepatic abscess occurred most often in infants who had sepsis or umbilical infection. Cases in older children were associated with underlying host defense defects, particularly chronic granulomatous disease (CGD) and leukemia. Common clinical findings were fever, abdominal pain and hepatomegaly. Radionuclide scan was useful in diagnosis of lesions larger than 2 cm. Small or microscopic lesions were diagnosed at autopsy. Staphylococcus aureus was the most common etiologic agent. Mortality in all evaluable cases was 27% in patients with CGD and 42% in those without CGD. Open drainage and appropriate antibiotic therapy is the treatment of choice and should lower the mortality of this infection.
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PMID:Pyogenic hepatic abscess in infancy and childhood. 71 87

Twenty infants and young children with hereditary fructose intolerance (HFI) were admitted to hospital. None was diagnosed at admission. Referals were for vomiting of unknown aetiology (16X), pyloric stenosis or hiatus hernia (5X), toxic condition (3X), and hepatomegaly of unknown origin (5X). Feeding difficulties (20X), vomiting (18X), and failure to thrive (16X) were leading symptoms. The most frequent clinical findings were hepatomegaly (18X), pallor (14X), haemorrhages (13X). Ascites, oliguria, tachypnoea, fever, splenomegaly and rickets were less frequent. Laboratory findings were indicative of disturbed hepatic and renal tubular function and also of disturbed intermediary metabolism (hypokaliaemia, hypophosphataemia). However, hypoglycaemia was found in only 4 out of 15 patients tested. Differential diagnosis after hospital admission centered on metabolic disorders such as glycogenoses, galactosaemia, tyrosinosis, or Wilson's disease. Hepatitis, toxic hepatosis, liver tumour, intrauterine infection and sepsis were also considered. Eleven children had first ingested fructose within the first 6 weeks of life. The diagnosis was usually established only many weeks or months after first fructose intake and appearance of symptoms. This documents how difficult the diagnosis of this disease can be both in practice and in hospital. The course was severe in 11 children and lethal in 4. In only 5 patients was the course mild. The 16 survivors are doing well under fructose-exclusion diet. Irreversible visual impairment after intraocular haemorrhage occurred once. In each case HFI could have been suspected immediately, had a detailed nutritional history been taken. Practising paediatricians should know the composition of commonly used infant formulae. They should never prescribe sugared condensed milk for intractable vomiting prior to excluding HFI. Solution for intravenous infusion containing fructose and sorbitol are life-threatening for undiagnosed HFI patients.
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PMID:Hereditary fructose intolerance in early childhood: a major diagnostic challenge. Survey of 20 symptomatic cases. 73

An unexplained increase in the frequency of pyogenic liver abscesses of unknown etiology has, fourtunately, been paralleled by significant advances in diagnostic and therapeutic methods. This report reviews experience with 14 patients operated upon at NYU Medical Center since 1971. Eight cases (57%) were cryptogenic. Other abscesses were associated with biliary disease (3); abdominal sepsis (2); and trauma (1). Abscesses were present on hospitalization in 12 patients. Clinical findings included fever (101-108 F); 100%; leucocytosis, 71%; anorexia and vomiting, 50%; localized tenderness and hepatomegaly, 50%; hypoalbuminemia, 86%; hypocholesterolemia, 78%; elevated SGOT, 71%; and elevated aikaline phosphatase, 43%. Technetium hepatic scintiscans showed focal defects in 10 of 12 patients (83%), but did not detect multiple abscesses in 2 of these. Hepatic arteriography performed in 10 patients was highly accurate, outlining single abscesses in 6 and multiple abscesses in 4. Furthermore, in one patient a false positive scintiscan was demonstrated by negative arteriography, confirmed by autopsy. In 4 patients, arteriography indicated an abscess in the posterior-superior area of the right hepatic lobe. With precise anatomical localization, a trans-thoracic approach permitted uncomplicated drainage in each case. This approach provides excellent exposure and direct drainage for abscesses in this area. An additional therapeutic adjunct in two patients, with 4 and 11 abscesses each, was postoperative intraportal infusion of antibiotics through the umbilical vein. Thirteen patients (83%) recovered, one dying from pulmonary embolism. Primary hepatic abscesses occur with increasing frequency. Primary hepatic abscesses occur with increasing frequency. Primary hepatic abscesses occur with increasing frequency. The methods described allow more precise preoperative diagnosis and direct surgical drainage.
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PMID:New diagnostic and therapeutic techniques in the management of pyogenic liver abscesses. 113 Aug 69

In a study of fifty patients subjected to cardiac surgery nine (18%) had immediate post-operative liver complications. These included persistente jaundice, an increase in hepatomegaly and elevation of the alkaline phosphatase. In these and the rest of the cases there were extra-hepatic complications such as hyposystole, infarct, the post-pericardiotomy syndrome as related to the heart. Pulmonary complications were of infectious nature and a general complication was sepsis. These complications were sufficiently important to relate them etiologically to the hepatic disorder. Especially important is right hyposystole and it or tricuspid insufficiency can be blamed for the hepatic disorder in some of these patient. Nonetheless, these hepatic complications are seen less frequently now that we are giving effective treatment to the tricuspid insufficiency during the surgical intervention. We observed the clinical picture known as "benign postoperative cholestasis" in only two patients. Hepatitis with jaundice was seen in four patients during one to three months postoperatively. This was HB hepatitis and its course was more prolonged than that usually seen in Mexico, and it turned into chronic hepatitis in four patients. Biopsies done in one case a six months and in the other at nine months post-operatively showed the picture of chronic aggresive hepatitis. In those patients who did not have hepatic complications a late liver evaluation showed an improvement as compared to the pre-operative condition which was parallel to the hemodynamic improvement.
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PMID:[Hepatic complications in the postoperative of cardiac surgery]. 123 73

Two cases of atypical Kawasaki disease are reported. Case 1 was a five-month-old male infant admitted to this hospital with a 10-day's history of high fever. On examination, he appeared ill-looking and only hepatomegaly was noted. Laboratory studies showed leukocytosis, thrombocytosis, elevated ESR and pleocytosis in CSF. He was treated as sepsis with meningitis. Sudden death occurred on the eighth day of admission, and left coronary artery aneurysm with thrombosis was noted at autopsy. Case 2 was a four-month-old male infant referred to our hospital with fever and cervical lymphadenopathy of 11 day's duration, and unresponsive to antibiotics. Skin rash had developed after oxacillin injection. Echocardiogram, performed on the third day of admission, disclosed a 5-8 mm aneurysm of the left coronary artery and a 4 mm aneurysm of the right coronary artery. Before a specific diagnostic test for Kawasaki disease becomes available, we suggest that a possible diagnosis of Kawasaki disease and echocardiographic evaluation should be considered in case of (1) presence of partial criteria of Kawasaki disease with thrombocytosis; and/or (2) young infants with prolonged unexplained fever.
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PMID:Atypical Kawasaki disease: report of two cases. 151 14

Galactosemia in newborns and infants is associated with the following symptoms: jaundice, hepatomegaly, failure to thrive, feeding difficulties, hypoglycemia, convulsions, lethargy, amino-aciduria, cataracts, hepatic cirrhosis, ascites, and mental retardation. If the preliminary evaluation indicates galactosemia, there is high risk for E. coli sepsis and death. Strong consideration should therefore be given for early antibiotic therapy in infants with suspected galactosemia in spite of the absence of clinical signs or symptoms of sepsis.
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PMID:Association of Escherichia coli sepsis and galactosemia in neonates. 156 28

Adult polycystic liver disease is characterized by multiple diffuse cystic lesions of the liver, usually in association with polycystic kidney disease. Rarely, significant liver disease will produce enough symptoms to call for surgical attention. Symptoms range from simple compression to fatal liver failure. Treatment of seven patients (six women) with symptomatic polycystic liver disease over 18 months is reported. Rapidly progressing liver failure and sepsis from infected ascites following puncture developed in one patient and precluded surgery. Another presented with an acute abdomen and anaemia from liver cyst bleeding and was treated conservatively. Five patients with massive hepatomegaly and compression symptoms underwent fenestration and resection to debulk the cystic liver mass. No intra-abdominal drains were used after operation and there were no hospital deaths. One patient developed a bile leak which was managed by percutaneous drainage. Clinical approach, complications and treatment options in adult polycystic liver disease are reviewed.
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PMID:Clinical experience with adult polycystic liver disease. 161 53

A 33-year-old man was hospitalized because of thrombocytopenia and severe splenomegaly. On admission 78% of peripheral lymphoid cells were abnormally large, with pale cytoplasm. Flow cytometry of the abnormal lymphocytes showed that they expressed CD 2, CD 3, CD 11, CD 16, and CD 56, but not CD 4 nor CD 8, so they were T-cell large granular lymphocytes (T-LGL). Abnormal lymphocytes obtained from a lymph node expressed CD 2, CD 16, CD 38, and CD 56, but not CD 3, CD 4, and CD 8, so they were natural killer(NK) cells. Splenectomy was performed and the operative specimen showed diffuse infiltration of pleomorphic lymphocytes, probably chronic lymphocytic leukemia cells. After splenectomy, the platelet count returned to normal but the lymphocytosis continued. Two years after discharge, chemotherapy was done because of thrombocytopenia and hepatomegaly. The patient died of disseminated intravascular coagulation arising from sepsis. The differences and similarities between peripheral and lymph-node lymphocytes suggest that LGL and NK cells may be differentiated from the same kind of cell, somewhat differentiated from stem cells.
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PMID:[Chronic lymphocytic leukemia with peripheral T lymphocytes expressing CD 2+, CD 3+, CD 4-, CD 8-, CD 16+, and CD 56+ and lymph-node lymphocytes expressing CD 2+, CD 3-, CD 4-, CD 8-, CD 16+, CD 38+, and CD 56+]. 171 68

The Wiskott-Aldrich Syndrome (WAS) is a rare X-linked immunohematological disorder characterized by eczema, profound thrombocytopenia, and progressive immunodeficiency. Severe hemorrhage, overwhelming sepsis, or lymphoreticular malignancy usually cause death in childhood. Recently, bone marrow transplantation (BMT) has been curative in some well-established cases, but there is no general agreement about the place of BMT in infants with WAS before the development of significant immunological abnormalities. We describe the successful use of early histocompatible BMT in a 10-month-old infant in whom WAS was diagnosed on the basis of eczema, thrombocytopenia, small platelets, and raised serum immunoglobulin A (Ig) and IgE, but before the development of immunodeficiency as evidenced clinically by recurrent infections, or immunologically by low serum IgM or consistently abnormal lymphocyte responses to mitogens. After an unstable period for several weeks posttransplantation when he developed marked hepatomegaly and severe interstitial pneumonitis, he made a good recovery. His eczema and thrombocytopenia resolved and he has shown no clinical or laboratory evidence of immunodeficiency. It is now over 2 years since his BMT. Because of the poor prognosis of WAS, where a histocompatible donor is available, BMT at the earliest opportunity, despite the inherent risks of such a procedure, may be the best option for an infant with WAS.
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PMID:Early bone marrow transplantation in an infant with Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome. 179 57

A fourteen month old infant was admitted for evaluation because of continuous high fever and an indurated nodular lesion at the left thigh of one month course. After admittance painful inflammatory subcutaneous nodules appeared in the face and trunk, these were accompanied by enlarged cervical lymph nodes and hepatomegaly. Histological evaluation of the skin biopsy showed destruction of subcutaneous tissue, foamy cells, vasculitis and polymorphonuclear leukocyte infiltration; histiocytic proliferation in the lymph nodes and steatosis in the liver biopsy. Osteoarticular infection, cellulitis, sepsis, tuberculosis, collagen disease, and malignancies of hematologic origin were all ruled out. Response to treatment with prednisone was excellent and the patient has been asymptomatic along a one year follow up period.
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PMID:[Weber-Christian disease]. 184 29


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