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Query: UMLS:C0036690 (
sepsis
)
59,461
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Two cases of Yersinia enterocolitica
septicemia
occurred in a breeding group of 22 adult patas monkeys (Erythrocebus patas). Affected animals had acute clinical signs of depression,
weakness
, dehydration, hypothermia, hepatomegaly and pronounced leukopenia. Both animals died a few hours after treatment was initiated. Gross necropsy findings included jaundice, fluid in body cavities, hepatomegaly, splenomegaly, multiple white foci within the liver and spleen, generalized lymph node enlargement and numerous mucosal ulcerations in the colon. Primary histopathological lesions were multifocal hepatic necrosis, splenic necrosis, chronic ulcerative enteritis and diaphragmatic myositis with necrosis and edema. Yersinia enterocolitica was cultured from the liver, spleen, lung, jejunum and rectum. Wild rodents, particularly mice, may have been a source of infection for these animals, as the monkeys were housed in a rural, indoor-outdoor facility. A preliminary culture survey showed that some clinically normal patas monkeys harbored the organism in their intestinal tracts.
...
PMID:Naturally occurring Yersinia enterocolitica septicemia in patas monkeys (Erythrocebus patas). 405 42
An X-linked recessive disease is reported in a large pedigree. The disease is characterised by a triad of dilated cardiomyopathy, neutropenia and skeletal myopathy. The untreated patients, all boys, died in infancy or early childhood from
septicemia
or cardiac decompensation. Ultrastructural abnormalities were observed in mitochondria in cardiac muscle cells, neutrophil bone marrow cells and to a lesser extent (0-9%) in skeletal muscle cells. Membrane-bound vacuoles were seen in neutrophil bone marrow cells. Intramuscular fat droplets were increased in type I skeletal muscle fibres. An affected patient had intermittent lactic acidemia, borderline low plasma carnitine, the latter decreasing during periods of illness, and low muscle carnitine (27% pretreatment; 35-40% posttreatment). While on treatment with oral carnitine he had less
weakness
and no cardiac complaints, but his neutropenia was not affected. Respiratory chain abnormalities were observed in this patient's isolated skeletal muscle mitochondria. These were: (1) diminished concentrations of cytochromes c1 + c, b and aa3 to 29, 47 and 64% of the averaged controls, and (2) a lowered P:0 ratio for oxidation of ascorbate + TMPD, with diminished uncoupler stimulated Mg2+-ATPase activity. Muscle AMP deaminase was deficient (5 resp. 17%). Only one previous report (Neustein et al. 1979) on X-linked mitochondrial cardiomyopathy exists, which probably refers to the same entity. Biochemical studies and haematological abnormalities (neutropenia) are reported for the first time.
...
PMID:An X-linked mitochondrial disease affecting cardiac muscle, skeletal muscle and neutrophil leucocytes. 614 97
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.
...
PMID:[Fatal Vibrio vulnificus infection in a patient with aplastic anemia]. 667 24
A patient with acute myelogenous leukemia developed severe hypophosphatemia manifesting by extreme
weakness
, confusion, loss of sphincter control, nuchal rigidity, hyperesthesia, hemolysis, congestive heart failure and liver dysfunction. The possible causes for this condition were starvation, parenteral glucose and saline administration,
sepsis
, hypokalemia and treatment with acetazolamide. A dramatic improvement was noted following phosphate administration.
...
PMID:Life-threatening hypophosphatemia in a patient with acute myelogenous leukemia. 677 68
The patient was a 61-year-old man who initially complained of skin pigmentation. He was diagnosed as malignant acanthosis nigricans associated with gastric cancer (IIc advanced) in March 1981. Surgical excision of the stomach was performed in May 1981. In July 1981 he experienced headache, vomiting and muscle
weakness
. A diagnosis of meningeal carcinomatosis was made based on his clinical symptoms, spinal fluid examination and a computerized tomography scan. The intraventricular administration of cytosine arabinoside, methotrexate and hydrocortisone via the Ommaya reservoir resulted in complete remission. In November 1981 the patient died of bronchopneumonia and
sepsis
due to pancytopenia.
...
PMID:[Case of gastric cancer associated with acanthosis nigricans and meningeal carcinomatosis]. 688 26
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
The central function of the liver as place of the formation of the most plasmatic coagulation factors in expressed by coagulation disturbances in severe liver diseases. Apart for intoxications, vitamin-K-deficiency and relatively rare congenital dysproteinoses the synthesis of the coagulation factors is apparently a relatively stable and rapidly recoverable function of the hepatocyte. On the other hand, however, the pathogenetic dominance of the accelerated balance in the sense of a disseminated intravasal coagulation and a secondarily increased fibrinolysis is emphasized for the severe disturbances of haemostasis in hepatopathies. In all kinds of shock, in tumours, inflammations,
sepsis
and intoxications as well as in portal hypertension of any reason the activation of the coagulation system up to the consumption coagulopathy develops. In the liver transplantation in addition to the operation shock deterioratingly comes the intensive blood contact with the often heavily damaged graft cells, the effectors of the immune system (rejection), the temporary disturbance of the clearance function of the liver RES and the basic disease of the recipient which in most cases disposes to the disseminated intravasal coagulation. The reduction of thrombocytes and coagulation factors extensively transgresses the changes which are to be expected by a
weakness
of the synthesis during and immediately after the anhepatic phase. For the therapy the demand of rapid removal of the coagulation-activating moments (minimum times of ischaemia, careful anastomoses) and of an adequate substitution with simultaneous prevention of the disseminated intravasal coagulation by heparinisation.
...
PMID:[The blood coagulation system in liver diseases with special reference to liver transplantation]. 703 96
A 68-year-old female on two-year chronic hemodialysis for chronic renal failure due to chronic pyelonephritis, was admitted to hospital for
weakness
, dulled sensorium and dizziness. On examination the patient was in a state of circulatory collapse, the electrocardiogram showed an accelerated idioventricular rhythm and laboratory analysis revealed extreme hyperkalemia (K+ 10.1 mmol/l). There were no common causes of shock, such as hypovolemia,
sepsis
, heart failure and presence of vasodilator drugs. The patient was treated with calcium gluconate, sodium bicarbonate and sodium chloride (to oppose the effects of hyperkalemia on the cell membrane to minimize cardiac and neuromuscular toxicity), insulin and dextrose (to increase the transport of K+ from the extracellular to the intracellular compartment), and hemodialysis (to remove K+ from the body). At the end of the hemodialysis session, the patient was in a clinically good condition, blood pressure was 160/90 mm Hg and the serum K+ concentration was normal. The case appeared to suggest that extreme hyperkalemia may have direct effects on vascular resistance, causing hypotension and shock.
...
PMID:A life-threatening complication of extreme hyperkalemia in a patient on maintenance hemodialysis. 748 41
Sepsis
occurs frequently in the pediatric intensive care unit and is a significant cause of morbidity and mortality. Multiple organ systems are adversely affected by
sepsis
. Approximately 70% of adult patients with
sepsis
have peripheral nervous system dysfunction on electrophysiologic studies, of whom 30% are symptomatic. Neuromuscular dysfunction in children with
sepsis
is increasingly reported; however, the incidence remains undefined. Flaccid quadriplegia with the inability to wean from ventilatory support despite full cardiopulmonary recovery is the typical presentation. However, lesser degrees of
weakness
may be demonstrated with careful evaluation. Electrophysiologic studies often demonstrate the presence of axonal polyneuropathies, abnormalities of neuromuscular transmission, or acute myopathies. Identifiable neuromuscular syndromes in children with
sepsis
include critical illness polyneuropathy, pure motor polyneuropathy, thick-filament myopathy, and necrotizing myopathy. The common underlying pathogenic process in these syndromes appears to be
sepsis
, which may be accentuated by the administration of steroids or neuromuscular blocking agents. Recovery in strength usually occurs over a period of weeks to months.
...
PMID:Neuromuscular complications of sepsis in children. 749 53
Whipple's disease is a systemic disease which may virtually affect any organ system, but in many cases it involves the small intestine causing gastrointestinal symptoms. The differential diagnosis is difficult since symptoms may be nonspecific. We report the case of a 44-year old white male patient with a history of migrating arthralgia and chronic fatigue. The patient newly developed an uveitis and underwent a vitrectomy; the further clinical work-up including gastroscopy with intestinal biopsy revealed no sufficient diagnosis. Subsequently, the patient's condition deteriorated with marked weight loss, fever and progressive
weakness
. An anaerobic
sepsis
with a corynebacterium was confirmed and with i.v.-antibiotics the patients's condition improved markedly. The further examinations disclosed enlarged mesenteric lymph nodes and the involvement of other organs (endocard, liver). CT-guided biopsy only showed fatty degeneration, but operative adenectomy confirmed Whipple's disease. The patient remained without relapse on long-term antibiotic treatment with doxycycline until today. Obviously, in our case the intestinal biopsies failed to detect Whipple's disease after the successful initiation of antibiotic treatment. In the absence of gastrointestinal findings and with concomitant secondary diseases the definitive diagnosis can be difficult. In addition, the previous uveitis and the endocardial involvement are most interesting.
...
PMID:[Masked course of Whipple disease with uveitis, infection, endocardial involvement and abdominal lymphomas--case report and review of the literature]. 754 42
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