Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0036690 (sepsis)
59,461 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In Pennsylvania, a 29-year-old woman was admitted to Temple University Health Sciences Center in Philadelphia with hypotension (100/80 mmHg), fever (105.3 degrees Fahrenheit), and a diffuse, nondesquamating erythroderma. Five weeks earlier, she had delivered her last child vaginally. Three days before admission, she had undergone endotracheal intubation so surgeons could perform a laparoscopic tubal ligation with Falope Rings. Two days before the tubal ligation, she had had a sore throat. She experienced no surgical complications and was discharged the same day as the operation. The day before her latest admission, she experienced nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, fever, chills, and diffuse abdominal pain. Upon admission, her surgical incisions were clean and dry and had no erythema. Her pulse rate was 140 beats/minute. Her respiration rate was 20/minute. The white blood cell count was 15,200 cells/cu. m (71% neutrophils, 23% band forms, 2% lymphocytes, and 4% monocytes). Her potassium level was 3.2 mmol/l. The anion gap was 22. All blood and urine cultures were negative. She experienced mild uterine tenderness. Upon admission, physicians administered ticarcillin-clavulanate and vancomycin for suspected postoperative pelvic infection. After learning that cervical and pharyngeal cultures were positive for Streptococcus pyogenes, physicians changed to ampicillin, 1 g intravenously every 6 hours. On the 6th day, she was discharged and prescribed 500 mg oral amoxicillin every 8 hours for 2 weeks. Within 2 weeks, she felt fine, had a normal physical examination, no fever, and no rash. The major signs and symptoms indicated a toxin-mediated illness. Both mucosal surfaces colonized by S. pyogenes were manipulated during laparoscopy and manipulation may have caused minor tissue injury and hyperemia with subsequent dissemination of streptococcal toxin. In conclusion, the patient had a S. pyogenes toxin-induced toxic shock-like syndrome that mimicked a pelvic wound infection with gram-negative septicemia.
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PMID:Streptococcal toxic shock-like syndrome as an unusual complication of laparoscopic tubal ligation. A case report. 799 32

Fournier's gangrene is a necrotising soft-tissue infection of the scrotum and perineal region caused by gram-negative and gram-positive Enterobacteriaceae. The disease is characterised by its unique appearance, its speed of onset, and its high mortality. CASE REPORT. A 26-year-old male presented to the emergency room complaining of a painful, tremendously swollen scrotum and penis (Fig. 1) that had developed within the past 24 h. Later, slurred speech, pallor, and hypotension were recognised, leading to the patient's admission to the intensive care unit. Suspecting a severe internal haemorrhage, vigorous volume therapy was started using crystalloids and colloids until blood and fresh frozen plasma were available. One hour later, septic shock was presumed and therapy augmented by IV antibiotics, tracheal intubation, and mechanical ventilation. Despite all efforts, the patients condition deteriorated rapidly and he died a few hours later due to multiple organ failure in septic shock. Postmortem, a perforated external hemorrhoidal node was found to be the primary focus of sepsis. Microbiologic cultures revealed Escherichia coli in blood and tissue samples. DISCUSSION. Fournier's gangrene is a rare disease; nevertheless, its clinical picture has to be recognised immediately in order to provide appropriate treatment in time. It occurs predominantly in males after minor trauma, colorectal or urological disease, and perineal or abdominal surgery. Fournier's gangrene usually begins with itching and pain in the scrotal region followed by swelling and dark-blueish discolouration of the scrotum and penis, occasionally including the lower abdominal wall. Fever and chills are usually present. The illness progresses to severe prostation and septic shock with a mortality of 20%-50%. Tissue cultures mostly reveal E. coli, gram-positive enterococci, Pseudomonas, Proteus, and various anaerobes. The treatment should include immediate radical surgical debridement, i.v. administration of broad-spectrum antibiotics, and cardiopulmonary support. CONCLUSION. The dramatic course of Fournier's gangrene requires early recognition, extensive surgical debridement, as well as intensive care treatment in order to prevent irreversible septic shock.
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PMID:[Fulminating E. coli sepsis in Fournier's gangrene]. 814 38

We encountered two relatively rare cases of sepsis due to Campylobacter fetus subsp. fetus (C. fetus). Case 1. A 54-year-old female with abdominal polysurgery developed a slight fever and vomiting in August 1984. Despite the administration of some digestive drugs by her family doctor, these symptoms continued. In mid-October, she was hospitalized with high fever with chill and rigor on the skin. On the third hospital day, C. fetus was detected in the blood culture. After combination chemotherapy of intravenous drip infusion of latamoxef (LMOX) (2 g/day) and oral administration of erythromycin (EM) (800 mg/day), her symptoms improved. Case 2. A 57-year-old male with diabetic retinopathy and nephropathy was hospitalized because of slight fever, general edema and pleural effusion. On the 6th hospital day, C. fetus was detected in the blood culture and he was diagnosed with sepsis. Under treatment with the intravenous drip of LMOX (2 g/day) and oral administration of EM (1200 mg/day), his condition improved. Both cases had common underlying diseases such as hypoproteinemia with edema and problems in the lower intestinal tract; the former had polysurgery and malabsorption syndrome, the latter had diffuse ulceration of the colon. Such underlying conditions may have permitted the invasion of C. fetus into the blood.
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PMID:[Two cases of Campylobacter fetus subsp. fetus sepsis]. 815 Nov 52

A 58-year-old man with diabetes had fever and chills 5 days after ingestion of raw seafood. Nausea, vomiting, watery diarrhea, bilateral calf pain, and neck stiffness subsequently developed. Generalized edema and ecchymotic patches with a vesiculobullous eruption appeared on the extremities. Four blood cultures were positive for Vibrio cholerae non-01. The patient was successfully treated with antibiotics. This is the first documented case of V. cholerae non-01 septicemia with cutaneous lesions and meningitis in Taiwan.
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PMID:Cutaneous manifestations of non-01 Vibrio cholerae septicemia with gastroenteritis and meningitis. 815 89

A 59-year-old man was scheduled for percutaneous nephrolithotripsy (PNL) for renal calculus. Anesthesia was maintained by epidurally administered mepivacaine 1.5% under prone position. During surgical manipulation, the patient complained of shivering and chill accompanied with fever and tachycardia. His temperature peaked at 40.7 degrees C and decreased gradually by cooling. Serratia was detected from arterial blood obtained in the operating room. It was thought that fever attack was due to excessive increase of intrarenal pressure by irrigation fluid which might have led to septicemia. Therefore, careful attention for septic attack must be paid during PNL procedure as well as postoperatively.
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PMID:[Septic attack during percutaneous nephrolithotripsy under epidural anesthesia]. 832 Aug 17

Adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) is a rare but important complication of blood transfusion because it has a mortality rate of 50-60%. ARDS is characterised by noncardiogenic pulmonary oedema and is often associated with major trauma and/or sepsis. Clinical features include dyspnoea, tachypnoea, chills and extensive crepitations. The pathogenesis has not been elucidated completely and a number of hypotheses have been proposed. Factors which have been implicated include neutrophil sequestration and complement activation, macrophages, metabolites of the arachidonic acid cascade and cytokines, all of which contribute to the amplification of the inflammatory process. In particular, leucoagglutinins have been implicated with blood transfusions. Treatment is generally supportive as specific therapeutic strategies remain largely unproven.
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PMID:Blood transfusion related adult respiratory distress syndrome. 844 6

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

A followup study on nonhospitalized spinal cord injury patients using clean intermittent catheterization was conducted to evaluate long-term clean intermittent catheterization for any genitourinary complications, and to institute and evaluate prompt management. A total of 50 patients (36 paraplegics and 14 quadriplegics) was followed for 3 months to 6.5 years (average followup 22 months). All patients had a baseline urodynamic study and renal scan before they were discharged from the hospital. Patients with a reflex bladder and sustained, high intravesical pressures (greater than 40 cm. water) were placed on anticholinergic medication to lower voiding pressures and maintain continence. Those on clean intermittent catheterization and condom drainage were also given alpha-blockers to achieve low pressure voiding and to control autonomic dysreflexia. Of 50 patients 43 (86%) acquired a total of 364 events of significant bacteriuria (10(4) or more colony-forming units per ml.) at a rate of 13.63 infections per 1,000 patient-days on clean intermittent catheterization. Subclinical symptoms for urinary tract infection were noted in 22 of the 43 patients (51%), whereas clinical symptoms for urinary tract infection were recorded in 16 of 43 (37%). These symptoms included fever in 8 patients, chills in 3, hematuria in 3 and flank pain in 2. There were 31 genitourinary complications in 21 patients noted during periodic diagnostic evaluations, with 6 classified as upper tract. Of 50 patients 4 (8%) required rehospitalization for urological problems. One patient died of questionable sepsis. Transurethral sphincterotomy was performed in 15 of the 50 patients (30%) and transurethral prostatectomy was done in 1 for multiple reasons, for example high intravesical voiding pressures, difficult catheterization, repeated symptomatic urinary tract infections or per patient request to discontinue clean intermittent catheterization. Of 7 patients who were catheterized by others 4 elected to discontinue long-term clean intermittent catheterization after an average of 13 months. Overall, 33 patients (66%) discontinued clean intermittent catheterization and 17 are still being followed on a long-term basis. Clean intermittent catheterization is a successful long-term option to drain bladders in spinal cord injury patients who can perform catheterization independently.
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PMID:Clean intermittent catheterization in spinal cord injury patients: a followup study. 848 12

Abrupt onset of fever with chills represents a body response to various stimuli called exogenous pyrogens. These substances interact with monocytes and macrophages, thus releasing various cytokines including interleukin-1 and tumor necrosis factor (endogenous pyrogens). Endogenous pyrogens act centrally on the thermosensitive neurons in the hypothalamus to increase the core body temperature by increasing heat production and decreasing heat loss. In addition, endogenous pyrogens trigger a non-specific inflammatory response and amplify the specific immune response through activating the T- and B-cell system. Pyogenic infections are the most frequent and most important cause of abrupt onset of fever with chill, but a similar pattern of fever may occur in many other situations. In many instances, a thorough history and a complete physical examination will produce a presumptive diagnosis. Further management decisions depend on the clinical conditions and on the localization of the infection. Patients with compromised vital functions, with involvement of the central nervous system, with chills associated with prolonged fever without localizing symptoms or physical findings, or with symptoms of intraabdominal sepsis, must be promptly hospitalized. The most important aspects of treatment should be directed at the cause of fever, and antipyretic drugs should be used after evaluation of relative risks in the individual case.
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PMID:[Fever with chills]. 848 86

Postanginal sepsis or Lemierre's syndrome is characterised by septic thrombophlebitis of the jugular vein, metastatic abscesses in the lungs, soft tissues, joints or elsewhere, occurring several days to two weeks after tonsillitis or pharyngitis. The primary pathogen is a Gram-negative anaerobic rod, mostly Fusobacterium necrophorum. Previously healthy, young adults are affected mainly and the syndrome was seen more frequently in the pre-antibiotic era than it is nowadays. In the three young patients described here, a girl aged 15 and two boys aged 18 and 16, F. necrophorum was isolated from blood or pus. Histories and examinations were suggestive of Lemierre's syndrome. Ultrasound and CT scanning of the neck and other localisations proved to be important diagnostic tools in assessing the diagnosis. Response to therapy was slow and depended in at least one case on adequate drainage of abscesses. If the syndrome is suspected, initial antibiotic treatment should provide adequate coverage of anaerobic bacteria. In previously healthy patients with chills and fever occurring several days after a sore throat, Lemierre's syndrome should be considered.
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PMID:[Postanginal sepsis caused by Fusobacterium necrophorum: Lemierre syndrome]. 836 43


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