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

To determine whether early intramuscular vitamin E supplementation influences the incidence of intraventricular hemorrhage (IVH) in infants with birth weight less than or equal to 1,500 g, data were analyzed from 134 infants enrolled on a protocol to evaluate the efficacy of intramuscular plus oral vitamin E v oral supplementation alone in the treatment of retrolental fibroplasia. All 134 infants received, via nasogastric tube, 100 mg/kg/d of vitamin E daily (dl-alpha-tocopheryl acetate in MCT [medium-chain triglyceride] oil; 150 mosM) for at least 8 weeks with the first dose administered within the first eight hours of life. Sixty-four patients received, in addition, intramuscular vitamin E on days 1, 2, 4, and 6 of life and 70 patients received placebo injections in a randomized double-blind fashion. In the first week, vitamin E plasma levels were significantly higher in the 64 patients given intramuscular vitamin E. In spite of this difference no change in the incidence of sepsis or necrotizing enterocolitis was observed. Both the incidence and severity of intraventricular hemorrhage were reduced significantly in the patients given intramuscular vitamin E as compared to the patients given placebo (P = .013 and P = .04, respectively). The data suggest that vitamin E, a natural antioxidant, may play an important role in protecting the CNS microcirculation from the effects of hypoxic/ischemic injury.
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PMID:Intraventricular hemorrhage and vitamin E in the very low-birth-weight infant: evidence for efficacy of early intramuscular vitamin E administration. 650 32

To further evaluate the efficacy of oral vitamin E in preventing the development of severe retrolental fibroplasia (RLF) in very low-birth-weight infants, 100 infants treated with 100 mg/kg/d of vitamin E (dl-alpha-tocopheryl acetate) were compared with 75 infants treated with 5 mg/kg/d of vitamin E (dl-alpha-tocopherol) in the same nursery during the previous year. All 175 infants weighed less than or equal to 1,500 g at birth and required supplemental oxygen. A total of 120 infants (69 treatment; 51 control) survived greater than or equal to 10 weeks. Multivariate analysis of the control population identified five risk factors (P less than or equal to .10): gestational age, level and duration of oxygen administration, intraventricular hemorrhage, sepsis, and birth weight. When multivariate analysis was applied to both control and treatment groups, the severity of RLF was found to be significantly reduced in infants given the treatment dose of vitamin E (P = .003). Ultrastructural analyses of 58 pairs of whole-eye donations from high-risk infants surviving less than 10 weeks suggest that the initial morphologic event is gap junction increases between the plasma membranes of adjacent spindle cells of the van-guard retina. Such extensively gap junction-linked spindle cells are apparently removed from the vasoformative process as early as 4 days of life, forming a barrier to further normal vascular development and triggering retinal and vitreal neovascularizations approximately 8 weeks later. These events are maximally suppressed by elevated plasma vitamin E levels in infants greater than or equal to 27 weeks gestational age.
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PMID:Retrolental fibroplasia: further clinical evidence and ultrastructural support for efficacy of vitamin E in the preterm infant. 668 94

We performed a double-blind study in 101 preterm infants who weighed less than or equal to 1500 g at birth, who had respiratory distress, and who survived for at least four weeks, to evaluate the efficacy of oral vitamin E in preventing the development of retrolental fibroplasia. Weekly indirect ophthalmologic examinations begun when the infants were three weeks old revealed a significant decrease in the incidence of retrolental fibroplasia greater than or equal to Grade III (P less than 0.03) and greater than or equal to Grade II (P less than 0.05) (McCormick classification) in the 50 infants given 100 mg of vitamin E per kilogram of body weight per day as compared with 51 given 5 mg per kilogram per day (controls). When multivariate analysis was applied to the controls, five risk factors were identified: gestational age, level and duration of administration oxygen, intraventricular hemorrhage, sepsis, and birth weight. When multivariate analysis was applied to both control and treatment groups, the severity of retrolental fibroplasia was found to be significantly reduced in infants given 100 mg of vitamin E (P = 0.012).
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PMID:Retrolental fibroplasia: efficacy of vitamin E in a double-blind clinical study of preterm infants. 702 75

A group of values were prospectively analyzed in 24 infants under 3 months, of age, who showed over 3% fragmented RBC's with no history of blood transfusions. Results were compared with those obtained in group of 26 infants of the same age and less than 1% fragmented RBC's. These infants with over 3% fragmented cells were found to have a significant association with: sepsis, jaundice, crenated RBC's, low levels of hemoglobin, increased reticulocyte count, and low vitamin E levels. No relationship was found with weight at birth, feeding history and disseminated intravascular coagulation. No cases of hemangioma or cardiac diseases were found. These findings are commented.
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PMID:[Jaundice caused by microangiopathic hemolysis associated to septicemia in the newborn]. 739 25

Intravenous vitamin E was associated with the deaths of 38 infants in the US in 1984. Because the vitamin E preparation used contained both vitamin E and a high level of polysorbate detergent, the etiology of the syndrome remains unknown. In this study, we determined the tissue disposition of an intravenous preparation of vitamin E solubilized with polysorbate (E-Ferol) in neonatal piglets. One to two-day-old piglets were injected daily with 50 IU/kg/d of vitamin E for a period of 13 days. Other groups were injected intramuscularly, or with a slow, 7 h intravenous infusion with 50 IU/kg/d vitamin E for six days. Massive splenic accumulation of vitamin E (16,004 micrograms/g vs 73 micrograms/g in controls) occurred following rapid injection, with far lesser concentrations in the liver and lung. Levels of vitamin E in the kidney and heart were only slightly above control. Tissue changes correlated with dosage and duration of vitamin E administration and suggested massive accumulation of vitamin E in cells of the mononuclear phagocyte system. Following slow intravenous infusion the highest levels of vitamin E occurred in the liver rather than spleen. Intramuscular injections at similar doses produced slight, but insignificant changes in tissue levels of vitamin E. We speculate that rapid intravenous injection of vitamin E emulsions produces massive accumulation in phagocytic cells of the spleen and to a lesser extent liver and lung, possibly leading to increased susceptibility to sepsis and/or abnormal pulmonary function. Slow infusions of vitamin E produce major accumulations in the liver rather than spleen.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Vitamin E toxicity in neonatal piglets. 789 50

Enteral nutrition (EN) has several advantages over parenteral nutrition (PN) for postoperative/posttrauma patients. Modern technologies for tube-feeding have made early EN possible. Jejunal tube-feeding has advantages over gastric tube-feeding: faster metabolic recovery, less vomiting, and less risk of regurgitation and aspiration. Immediate or early EN stimulates the splanchnic and hepatic circulations, improves mucosal blood flow, prevents intramucosal acidosis and permeability disturbances, and eliminates the need for stress ulcer prophylaxis. Saliva containing important antimicrobial substances and gastric acidity are important in sepsis prevention. Chewing, saliva, and gastric acidity support gastric nitric oxide (NO) release, important for mucosal blood flow, gastrointestinal (GI) motility, mucus formation, and bacteriostasis. An oral supply of NO-donating substances and chewing of nitrate-rich food, such as lettuce or spinach, can be useful. Oral and mucosa-protective lipids are recommended. H2 blockers and saliva-inhibiting drugs are avoided. Immediate EN should be given, starting with 25 ml/hr and increasing to 100 ml/hr over 24 to 48 hours. For the immunocompromised patient special attention should be given to the purity of water. Bottled water can contain bacteria such as Pseudomonas. Food antioxidants such as glutathione, vitamin E, and beta-carotenes are important. Ingredients for the colonic mucosa are important. Approximately 10% of caloric need is satisfied by so-called colonic food (prebiotics), fermented at the level of the colonic mucosa to produce colonic mucosa nutrients and to prevent gut origin sepsis. More than 10 g of fiber per day is recommended. The fermenting flora (probiotic flora) is deranged owing to disease or antibiotic treatment, and resupply of flora is important. A new concept of ecoimmune nutrition is presented for enteral supply of mucosa-reconditioning ingredients: new surfactants, pseudomucus, fiber, amino acids such as arginine, and mucosa-adhering Lactobacillus plantarum 299.
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PMID:Nutritional support to prevent and treat multiple organ failure. 866 38

The effect of acute endotoxin-induced septic shock on myocardium oxidative stress after low or high vitamin C and/or E dietary supplementation was studied in guinea pigs, laboratory animals which, like human, do not have capacity for ascorbate synthesis. Neither the antioxidant enzymes or GSH were modified by endotoxin and vitamin treatments. Vitamin E showed a strong capacity to protect the myocardium against both enzymatic and non-enzymatic lipid peroxidation even in the presence of endotoxin. Vitamin C supplementation increased heart ascorbate whereas endotoxic shock totally depleted the heart ascorbate of vitamin C supplemented animals without changing vitamin E. Endotoxin significantly increased myocardium uric acid, a marker of ischemia induced oxidative stress, in animals fed with low vitamin C levels. This increase was totally prevented in vitamin C supplemented, but not in vitamin E supplemented animals. Strongly depressed levels of plasma vitamin C have been recently described in sepsis in human patients. The results suggest that ascorbate is a primary antioxidant target in the heart of endotoxin treated mammals lacking the capacity to synthesize ascorbate and that ascorbate can have a protective value against endotoxin-induced free radical damage in the myocardium. Implications of these results for the possible preventive role of vitamin C in humans during sepsis are discussed.
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PMID:Endotoxin depletes ascorbate in the guinea pig heart. Protective effects of vitamins C and E against oxidative stress. 876 Oct 15

To identify the regulatory effect of sodium selenite and vitamin E on the complement-neutrophil-reactive oxygen(ROS) activation feedback (CNAF) mechanism mediated inflammatory response, we detected ROS production and complement activation in vitro tests by chemiluminescence technique and complement fixation and recognized the regulation of the inflammatory response in vivo mouse vasculitis models of skin, lung, and liver. Convincing results were observed as both in vitro and in vivo experiments showing inhibition of CNAF mechanism with sodium selenite and vitamin E could effect the reduced ROS production and complement activation. The incidence (100%) for vasculitis in control group decreased to 20%-57% in sodium selenite and vitamin E treated groups. Elucidation of the ancillary mechanism of CNAF enhancing inflammatory response is a promising area for new therapeutic developments in the modulation of inflammatory response. As in a clinical approach, a remarkable therapeutic effect with sodium selenite was observed during an epidemic episode of epidemic hemorrhagic fever in Henan province. The mortality rate of fulminant cases was reduced from 100% of untreated control cases to 36.6% by treatment with sodium selenite. The results of present studies strongly suggest that antioxidants such as selenium and vitamin E as well as others like flavonoids can exhibit a novel anti-inflammatory action via this CNAF mechanism. It is expected in the future an increasing number of patients with severe infections or inflammatory disorders in which excessive complement activation and adverse ROS production have been implicated, e. g. ischemia-reperfusion injury, severe sepsis and diverse inflammatory vascular injuries like rheumatoid arthritis, hepatitis and inflammatory bowel diseases should benefit from this newer concept guided adjuvant therapies which make use of nutrient antioxidants like selenium, vitamin E and others.
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PMID:[Modulation of the inflammatory response through complement-neutrophil activation feedback mechanism with selenium and vitamin E]. 1290 10

Trolox is a hydrophilic analogue of vitamin E. The aim of this study was to investigate its effects on hepatic injury, especially alteration in cytochrome P450 (CYP)-dependent drug metabolism during polymicrobial sepsis. Rats were subjected to polymicrobial sepsis by cecal ligation and puncture (CLP). The rats were treated intravenously with Trolox (2.5 mg/kg) or vehicle, immediately after CLP. Serum aminotransferases and lipid peroxidation levels were markedly increased 24 h after CLP. This increase was attenuated by Trolox. Total CYP content and NADPH-P450 reductase activity decreased significantly 24 h after CLP. This decrease in CYP content was attenuated by Trolox. At 24 h after CLP, there was a significant decrease in the activity of these CYP isozymes: CYP1A1, 1A2, 2B1, and 2E1. However, Trolox differentially inhibited the decrease in CYP isozyme activity. Trolox had little effect on the decrease in CYP1A1 activity but Trolox significantly attenuated decreases in CYP1A2 and 2E1 activities. In fact, Trolox restored CYP2B1 activity to the level of activity found in control rats. Our findings suggest that Trolox reduces hepatocellular damage as indicated by abnormalities in hepatic drug-metabolizing function during sepsis. Our data also indicates that this protection is, in part, caused by decreased lipid peroxidation.
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PMID:The beneficial effect of Trolox on sepsis-induced hepatic drug metabolizing dysfunction. 1502 27

The Committee on Fetus and Newborn of the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) has endorsed 1 to 2 mg/dl as the normal range of serum tocopherol level. Our Cochrane review has shown that vitamin E supplementation resulting in levels >3.5 mg/dl, but not < or =3.5 mg/dl, significantly reduces the risk for severe retinopathy among very-low-birth-weight (VLBW) infants examined but increases the risks of sepsis and of necrotizing enterocolitis among infants treated for >1 week. As a fixed daily intravenous dose of vitamin E results in an inverse relationship between serum level and birth weight and is a risk for both low and high serum tocopherol levels, a dose adjusted for current weight appears more judicious than a fixed dose per day. Based on currently available data the AAP and the American Society for Clinical Nutrition currently recommend a routine intake of 2 ml/kg/day of MVI Pediatric (2.8 IU/kg/day) in VLBW infants (maximum of 5 ml/day or 7 IU/day).
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PMID:What is the appropriate intravenous dose of vitamin E for very-low-birth-weight infants? 1506 95


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