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

The authors report their experience with 56 percutaneous nephrostomies (PCNs) performed on an outpatient basis on 55 patients. Complications included pain that required use of parenteral medication in four patients, bleeding in three that resolved spontaneously, and shaking chills or fever in 12. This last complication, considered to be a sign of sepsis and treated with antibiotics, occurred more frequently than the 1.4%-4.5% infectious complication rate reported in the literature. Antibiotic use during and after PCN significantly decreased the likelihood of sepsis. In the high-risk group, antibiotic administration during and after PCN decreased the risk of developing signs of sepsis from 50% to 9%. On the basis of the authors' results and the findings in the literature about antibiotic prophylaxis, guidelines are recommended to improve the safety of PCN as an outpatient procedure. In the majority of instances PCN should still be considered to be more safely performed as an inpatient procedure at this time.
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PMID:Percutaneous nephrostomy tube placement: an outpatient procedure? 202 3

Sepsis, an important cause of hospital mortality, continues to be a diagnostic and therapeutic challenge. To define more clearly the impact of encephalopathy on the course of sepsis, the various clinical signs of sepsis, blood culture results, and mortality rates were examined in relation to mental status in septic patients. Patients were classified as having an acutely altered mental status due to sepsis (AAMS), preexisting altered mental status (PAMS), or normal mental status (NMS). Twenty-three (307/1333) percent of the study patients had an acutely altered sensorium secondary to sepsis. Patients with AAMS had a higher mortality (49%) than patients with PAMS (41%) or patients with NMS (26%) (p less than .000001). Multivariate analysis disclosed that altered mental status, hypothermia, hypotension, thrombocytopenia, and the absence of shaking chills were independent predictors of increased mortality in the sepsis syndrome. Patients with Gram-negative bacteremia (28%) were as likely to have AAMS as patients with Gram-positive bacteremia (25%) or patients with negative blood cultures (23%). In summary, alterations in mental status are common in septic patients, and are associated with significantly higher mortality.
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PMID:Impact of encephalopathy on mortality in the sepsis syndrome. The Veterans Administration Systemic Sepsis Cooperative Study Group. 237 91

We have recently experienced a case of Vibrio vulnificus septicemia which occurred in a patient with hepatic cirrhosis, and as we were able to give early antibiotic treatment, the patient survived. We would like to report this case here together with another case experienced 2 years ago. Case 1 was a 58-year-old male who was attending our hospital as an outpatient for hepatic cirrhosis. At 5:30 pm on August 8, 1987, he consumed abalone and giant clam and at 9 pm complained of high fever with shaking chills. He was admitted to our department as an emergency case. Cefoperazone was administered resulting in a decline of fever on the following day. During the course of treatment he fell transiently into pre-DIC, but due mainly to the administration of antibiotics his condition was subsided. Case 2 was a 53-year-old male who was under medical care in our hospital for grave hepatic cirrhosis. On October 11, 1985, he consumed sushi and two days later suffered chills and pyrexia. A blood culture revealed Vibrio vulnificus. His condition improved transiently with administration of Cefazolin, but oliguria, hypotension and ascites occurred subsequently, and finally the patient died on the 22nd day.
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PMID:[Two case reports of septic shock due to Vibrio vulnificus with liver cirrhosis]. 250 32

Sixteen episodes of ventricular tachycardia and/or fibrillation, 12 of which occurred during shaking chills, were recorded in six patients with septicemia. All patients were greater than 60 years of age and had suffered a previous myocardial infarction. Patients who survived the condition sustained no further arrhythmias during a follow-up period of 1 to 4 years, despite the fact that no antiarrhythmic medication was administered. It is suggested that patients greater than 60 years of age who had suffered a previous myocardial infarction should be carefully monitored during septic episodes and especially during shaking chills, since these may represent vulnerable periods facilitating the precipitation of potentially lethal arrhythmias.
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PMID:Life-threatening ventricular arrhythmias in septicemia. 646 75

The patient was a 59-year-old man who had been in hospital suffering from aplastic anemia with transfusion hemosiderosis. Sudden onset of weakness, shaking chills and headache was observed after his staying out overnight on July 25, 1981. His temperature was 39.3 degrees C and he complained of abdominal pain and abdominal distension. His blood pressure dropped to a dangerous level and tonic convulsions that had begun in the upper body gradually extended to the whole body and he died 23 hours after his return. V. vulnificus was isolated by the blood culture performed before death. During his stay away from the hospital, he had eaten raw cuttlefish, which was considered to be the source of infection. V. vulnificus is one of the halophilic marine vibrios and is isolated frequently in summertime from the sea foods and sea water near Japan. It has been disclosed that the presence of underlying diseases such as liver cirrhosis, hemochromatosis can predispose a person to fatal sepsis by V. vulnificus. In this case, besides leukocytopenia, the presence of hemosiderosis induced by many transfusions was considered to be a major cause leading to the fulminating course of the disease.
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PMID:[Fatal Vibrio vulnificus infection in a patient with aplastic anemia]. 667 24

Despite the low morbidity and mortality of laparoscopic cholecystectomy, trauma and infection have been reported. Such complications can produce a misleading clinical picture, as in two cases we observed. Case 1. A symptomatic 56-year-old female patient underwent laparoscopic cholecystectomy. During the operation, the gall bladder ruptured and the contents had to be aspirated from the abdominal cavity. The patient complained of hepatalgia 2 weeks after the operation, then was not seen again for more than 1 year when fever and hepatalgia did not respond to symptomatic treatment. An inter-hepato-renal collection (6 cm in diameter) was punctured under echography. Aspirate culture yielded Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Adapted antibiotic therapy was unsuccessful and surgery was required to empty the abscess then remove a fibrous conjunctive tissue formation. Case 2. A 55-year-old female patient with a history of complete remission after mammectomy for breast cancer underwent laparoscopic cholecystectomy in 1991. Two days after the operation, fever (39 degrees C) was accompanied by abdominal defence. Biliary peritonitis due to imperfect suture of the bile duct was repaired followed by peritoneal lavage-drainage. Per-operative blood samples revealed type 6 Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Despite adapted parenteral antibiotics, fever persisted at 39 degrees C and intense jaundice was observed. A second laparoscopy 14 days later showed inflammatory narrowing of the main bile duct which was drained into a small bowel loop. Eight days later computed tomography revealed multiple abscess in the liver. Transparietal cholangiography was performed and showed that the contrast medium entered the abscesses via the biliary canals. The state of sepsis persisted, jaundice worsened and hepatic encephalopathy developed with obnubilation and flapping tremor. After 1 month of general antibiotherapy, no improvement was seen on computed tomography images and needle biopsy of an abscess led to the identification of resistant type 6 P. aeruginosa. Antibiotics were adapted and administered iv with no clinical improvement. Selective catheterism of the hepatic artery via the femoral access was performed to allow intra-hepatic antibiotic delivery. Three weeks later clinical situation remained unchanged when acute respiratory distress highly suggestive of pulmonary embolism led to death. Autopsy was not performed. In both of these rare cases of infectious complications due to P. aeruginosa after laparoscopic cholecystectomy, the source of contamination remained unknown. Nosocomial infection was suspected.
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PMID:[Celioscopic cholecystectomy. 2 cases of infectious complications]. 782 63

Because of its proven effectiveness in reducing the need for banked blood transfusions following total joint arthroplasty, the indications for postoperative blood retrieval were expanded to include seven cases of infected total knee or hip arthroplasties where a one-stage exchange procedure was performed. Each joint had been aspirated after surgery and had positive cultures but no gross pus at the time of revision surgery. Each of the operations included debridement with reimplantation of a cementless prosthesis under cover of intravenous antibiotics for 48 hours followed by oral treatment until discharge. Antibiotic-soaked morselized bone graft was used in all patients to restore deficient nonstructural bone. Wound drainage blood was retrieved and reinfused during the first 8 hours after surgery, averaging 958 cc. Banked blood usage averaged 2.4 U (88% homologous) with an average blood loss of 1,974 cc. One patient experienced shaking chills during a second reinfusion of 600 cc of blood without stoppage of the transfusion. Wound hematoma occurred in one patient but did not require surgical evacuation. No patient developed evidence of septicemia.
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PMID:Reinfusion of whole blood after revision surgery for infected total hip and knee arthroplasties. 847 28

Patients who use PermCath as the vascular access for long-term hemodialysis are occasionally confronted with catheter-related infections. Recently, we have treated 17 patients suffering from PermCath-related sepsis. The clinical presenting features were leukocytosis in 14/17, high fever and shaking chill during dialysis in 12/17, and signs of exit site infection in 3/17. No shock was found. All patients received clinical evaluation to exclude infection sources other than from blood and inside the catheter, such as pulmonary, genitourinary, hepatobiliary and cutaneous systems. Blood drawn from both PermCath and peripheral vein was sent for bacterial culture. Bacterial culture of the blood samples from PermCath revealed Staphylococcus sp. in 7/17, Pseudomonas sp. in 5/17, Enterobacter sp. in 4/17, Streptococcus sp. in 1/17. Fourteen blood samples from peripheral vein showed positive culture results identical to those from PermCath, but negative study were noted in three other patients. The patients were divided into two treatment groups: Group I: systemic antibiotics without PermCath removal in 7, Group II: "locked-in" retention in addition to systemic anti-biotics in 10. Antibiotics were empirically chosen according to bacteriological studies. In the "locked-in" retention treatment, antibiotics were retained into both the inflow and outflow PermCath lumens in the exact volume of each lumen for 24 hours. The antibiotics solutions were replaced on a daily basis. The same antibiotics were also given intravenously. Duration of treatment depended on clinical progression and follow-up blood culture results and ranged between 13 and 24 days. The schedule of dialysis was not changed through the period of PermCath-related sepsis. The sepsis was cured in all group II cases but not in 2 of group I and resulted in mortality in these 2 patients. The PermCaths were preserved in 5/7 in group I with two mortality cases and all except one preserved in group II patients without mortality. We suggested that "locked-in" retention in addition to systemic antibiotics is the treatment of choice for the patients with PermCath-related sepsis. This method also preserves the functional integrity of PermCath, which is the lifeline vascular access of the patients with exhausted native vessels.
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PMID:Treatment of PermCath-related sepsis in uremic patients. 910 2

A previously healthy 15-year-old female was admitted to our hospital complaining of nausea and vomiting. She did not complain of diarrhea. A physical examination revealed a lower right quadrant abdominal tenderness without rebound or spontaneous pain and a knocking pain of the costovertebral angle. A high fever, knocking pain of costovertebral angle, and urinary findings including Gram's stain, lead us to suspect a urinary tract infection, cefotiam was administered intravenously. Spiking fever with shaking chills continued for three days, and three sets of blood cultures were positive for Salmonella Oranienburg, but her urine culture was negative. Her history was taken again, revealing an intake of a processed squid product. The product was confirmed by the local public health center to be Salmonella Oranienburg. Finally food poisoning by Salmonella Oranienburg with sepsis was diagnosed. With cefotiam she became better and was discharged from the hospital on the 10th hospital day. During admission to the hospital she did not experience any diarrhea, and her stool culture was negative. Epidemics of Salmonella Oranienburg food poisoning are relatively rare in the literature. In Japan, one has arisen as a result of contamination of a processed squid product in March 1999. However, there have been no cases without so-called gastroenteritic symptoms (abdominal pain and diarrhea) who were previously healthy and developed sepsis caused by Salmonella Oranienburg, reported in Japan. Even in previously healthy patients, with an epidemic situation of non-typhoidal salmonellosis, salmonella sepsis must be ruled out. Among such cases, those who present with spiking fever and shaking chills should be given antibiotic therapy after taking appropriate cultures.
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PMID:[Sepsis due to Salmonella Oranienburg--a case report]. 1048 26

We report a 57-year-old woman with progressive gait disturbance and mental deterioration. She was well until March 1995, when she was 54 years of the age. At that time she noted a gradual onset of tremor and difficulty using her hand. Similar symptoms appeared in her right hands, and she visited another hospital, where 300 mg of levodopa and 7.5 mg of bromocriptine were prescribed. These medication did not help her symptoms. In the summer of 1996, she became to fall down easily. In September of the same year, she started to repeat the same words many times. She was unable to stop it. She was hospitalized to our service on January 25, 1997. On admission, she was alert but demented moderately; her Hasegawa dementia scale was 15/30. She showed palilallia, logoclonia, and echolalia. She showed constructional apraxia and questionable left-right disorientation. She had marked vertical gaze palsy with preserved oculocephalic response. She had masked face and small voice. Her gait was wide based with small steps. No muscle atrophy or weakness was noted. She showed only mild rigidity in the neck, but no rigidity was noted in the limb. No tremor was noted. She was bradykinetic. Deep tendon reflexes were symmetric and within normal limits. Laboratory findings on admission was unremarkable. MRI showed atrophy of the brain stem as well as cerebral cortical areas, particularly in the fronto-temporal region. Her hospital course was complicated with paralytic ileus and septicemia. She developed hypotension and pronounced dead on July 28, 1998. She was discussed in the neurological CPC. The chief discussant arrived at a conclusion that the patient had progressive supranuclear palsy and died of septic shock. All the participants wondered between PSP and CBD, but majority agreed with this diagnosis of the chief discussant. Only one thought that she might have had corticobasal degeneration rather than PSP, because of dementia, cortical atrophy in MRI, and lack of limb rigidity. Postmortem examination revealed cortical and brain stem atrophy. In the premotor cortex, marked astrocytosis and ballooned neurons were seen. Furthermore, astrocytic plaques were seen; this is considered to be pathognomonic for CBD. The substantia nigra showed marked neuronal loss and gliosis, but no neurofibrillary tangles or Lewy bodies were seen. Gliosis was also seen in the globus pallidus and in the medial thalamus. The pathologic diagnosis was corticobasal degeneration. This patient was very interesting case, in that the clinical manifestations appeared to be consistent with PSP, yet pathologic diagnosis was CBD. Lack of limb rigidity may be atypical for advanced PSP. In addition, palilalia appears to be more associated with CBD.
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PMID:[A 57-year-old woman with progressive disturbance of gait and mental deterioration]. 1121 88


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