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

In order to effectively treat shock the physician must understand the physiology of shock. Shock patients may have a low, normal, or high arterial blood pressure, and the blood volume may be below normal, normal, or above normal. Shock is not necessarily accompanied by low arterial pH or low peripheral resistance. Most cases of acute traumatic and hemorrhagic shock show a high arterial pH, partly due to the blowing off of CO2, despite an elevated blood lactic acid level. Most patients also show a very high resistance. A factor that all shock patients have in common is a deficient capillary perfusion, or an insufficient amount of blood flowing through the capillaries. The cornerstone of the treatment of hypovolemic shock is the administration of adequate amounts of the right kinds of intravenous fluids. Focus is on classification of shock (reversible shock, irreversible or fatal shock, hypovolemia), the heart in shock, respiration, drugs (steroids, vasoactive drugs), and disseminated intravascular coagulation. If edema is a problem, diuretics may be helpful. Antibiotics for infection are very important in sepsis and septic shock. Supportive drugs are also important. Steroids and vasoactive drugs have a secondary place in the treatment of shock, and they should be used when these treatments have failed to produce an adequate blood pressure and urinary output.
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PMID:Treatment of shock. 44 80

Septicemia and meningoencephalitis developed in 10 pastured cattle 7 months to 3 years of age. Two unrelated herds were involved. Necropsy findings were similar to those previously reported in cattle infected with a Haemophilus-like organism, including multifocal intramuscular hemorrhages, suppurative polyarthritis, and multifocal hemorrhagic thrombi in the brain. A Haemophilus-like organism was isolated from one animal. It was characterized by growth on blood agar or tryptose agar plus a feeder streak under raised carbon dioxide tension, and lack of response to Haemophilus growth factors X and V.
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PMID:Septicemia and meningoencephalitis in pastured cattle caused by a Haemophilus-like organism ("Haemophilus somnus"). 55 84

Fifteen patients (range of ages, 18 to 35 years) who survived an acute episole of the adult respiratory distress syndrome caused by mechanical or thermal injuries, sepsis, and shock were studied during 1 to 30 months after recovery. The patients had had no previous pulmonary diseases, and only two had been smokers. All of the patients were asymptomatic, and their chest x-ray films were normal on follow-up examination. Tests of pulmonary function revealed mild abnormalities which consisted of reduction of pulmonary volumes, decreased carbon monoxide diffusing capacity, and a mild increase of alveolar-arterial oxygen pressure gradients in the early stage ofter recovery. Improvement was noted after a few months, but eight patients still had mild reduction of pulmonary volume after one to two years. No correlation could be established between the severity of the adult respiratory distress syndrome, therapy with mechanically assisted ventilation, the duration of exposure to supplemental oxygen, the fractional concentration of oxygen in the inspired gas, and the degree of residual functional defect.
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PMID:Pulmonary function following the adult respiratory distress syndrome. 68 80

Septicemia and meningoencephalitis developed in 10 pastured cattle 7 months to 3 years of age. Two unrelated herds were involved. Necropsy findings were similar to those previously reported in cattle infected with a Haemophilus-like organism, including multifocal hemorrhages in some muscles, suppurative polyarthritis, and multifocal hemorrhagic thrombi in the brain. A Haemophilus-like organism was isolated from one animal. It was characterized by growth on blood agar or tryptose agar plus a feeder streak under raised carbon dioxide tension, and lack of response to Haemophilus growth factors X and V.
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PMID:Septicemia and meningoencephalitis in pastured cattle caused by a Haemophilus-like organism ("Haemophilus somnus"). 87 92

In a retrospective study covering the period January 1972 to June 1974, recovery rates of bacteria and of fungi were generally equivalent with tryptic soy broth, Thiol, thioglycolate, and Columbia broth media (all under vacuum with carbon dioxide and sodium polyanetholesulfonate). An additional biphasic medium consisting of brain heart infusion broth and a brain heart infusion agar slant, which was inoculated only where fungal sepsis was suspected clinically, yielded significantly higher recovery rates of fungi. There were 29 instances of cultures with fungi in both the biphasic and broth media, 80 instances of cultures with fungi only in the biphasic medium, and no instances of fungi only in the broth media. The isolates were as follows: Candida albicans, 74; C. parapsilosis, 20; C. tropicalis, 16; Torulopsis glabrata, 18; Torulopsis sp., 1; Cryptococcus neoformans, 12; C. laurentii, 2; and Histoplasma capsulatum, 16. Despite routine subcultures of the broth media to chocolate blood agar within 24 h of inoculation and after 5 days of incubation, detection of fungemia was significantly improved by the use of a biphasic medium.
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PMID:Detection of fungi in blood cultures. 117 6

Furosemide frequently is advocated as a prophylaxis against renal failure in septic and injured patients; this effect is thought to be secondary to an increase in renal blood flow. This postulate was tested within 72 hours of admission in 22 previously healthy patients with acute pancreatitis (two), massive trauma (ten), or severe sepsis (ten). Renal clearances of inulin (GFR), para-amino hippurate (ERPF), sodium (CNA), osmoles (COsm), and free water (CH2O) were measured in milliliters per minute before and after the intravenous infusion of furosemide (0.5 mg. per kilogram of body weight). Renal vein PAH levels (EPAH) in eight patients were used to calculate true renal plasma flow (TRPF), true renal blood flow (TRBF), and renal vascular resistance (RVR). Furosemide caused a significant increase in urine volume, CNa, and COsm; there were no significant changes in GFR, ERPF, RVR, TRBF, and EPAH. These findings also were observed when the patients were subgrouped according to elevated, normal, or low renal plasma flow and elevated renal vascular resistance. No significant changes were seen in EPAH, thus making a redistribution of renal blood flow unlikely. These studies indicate that furosemide has only a diuretic effect and no hemodynamic effect in the kidney; it has the potential of seriously reducing the circulatory volume and causing renal failure in critical patients.
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PMID:Renal hemodynamic response to furosemide in septic and injured patients. 126 63

One hundred ten infants with congenital diaphragmatic hernia (CDH) developed life-threatening respiratory distress in the first 6 hours of life. Associated anomalies were present in 33%. Twenty-eight of 65 infants (43%) treated before 1987 (pre-extracorporeal membrane oxygenation [ECMO] era) survived after immediate CDH repair, and mechanical ventilation with or without pharmacologic support. Only two of 16 (12.5%) infants requiring a prosthetic diaphragmatic patch survived. Since 1987, 31 of 46 (67.4%) infants with birth weight, gestational age, and severity of illness similar to the pre-1987 group survived. All patients were immediately intubated and ventilated. Seven (four with lethal chromosomal anomalies) infants died before treatment, and 30 stabilized (partial pressure of carbon dioxide [PCO2] < 50; partial pressure of oxygen [PO2] > 100; pH > 7.3) and underwent delayed CDH repair at 5 to 72 hours. Fifteen did well on conventional support and survived. Fifteen infants deteriorated after operation: 11 were placed on ECMO with eight survivors, and four infants were not considered ECMO candidates. Nine babies failed to stabilize initially and were placed on ECMO before CDH repair (alveolar-arterial gradient > 600 and oxygenation index > 40), and seven survived. The overall survival rate was 80% at 3 months in this ECMO-treated group. Early mortality was due to inability to wean from ECMO (one), intracranial hemorrhage (one), liver injury (one), and pulmonary hypoplasia (one). Nine of 11 babies requiring a prosthetic patch in the post-1987 ECMO group survived (81.8%). There were three late post-ECMO deaths (3 to 18 months) of right heart failure (two) and sepsis (one). Symptomatic gastroesophageal reflux occurred in nine cases, six requiring a fundoplication in the bypass babies. Recurrent diaphragmatic hernia occurred in nine cases (five ECMO). The overall survival rate was significantly improved in the delayed repair/ECMO group (67% versus 43%; p < 0.05) and was most noticeable in infants requiring a prosthetic diaphragm (81.2% versus 12.5%; p < 0.005). These data indicate that early stabilization, delayed repair, and ECMO improve survival in high-risk CDH. Early deaths are related to pulmonary hypertension and can be reversed by ECMO.
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PMID:Delayed surgical repair and ECMO improves survival in congenital diaphragmatic hernia. 141 95

The metabolic impact of infusing a large amount of leucine (Leu) or valine (Val) was examined with regard to the corrective effect of total parenteral nutrition (TPN). Rats recovering from severe sepsis received either Leu- or Val-enriched TPN solution for 30 hours. The in vivo behavior of the amino acids administered was explored by a pulse injection of 14C-labeled Leu or Val. The recovery of 14CO2 from Leu increased by 64% in the septic rats of Leu-TPN group (41% of dose; p less than .01), as compared with control rats receiving the same TPN solution, whereas no significant rise in the 14CO2 recovery from Val occurred in the septic rats given Val-TPN (45% of dose) in comparison with the corresponding controls. The enhancement of Leu catabolism to CO2 in the Leu-TPN group was compatible with the alterations of urinary nitrogen excretion, plasma Leu level, and metabolite contents of liver and muscle. The only difference in metabolite levels observed between the two TPN groups was in hepatic total adenine nucleotides. Plasma amino acid levels were largely unaffected by infusion of these TPN solutions highly enriched with branched-chain amino acids (45%), except for an approximately threefold elevation of the Val level in Val-TPN rats. Thus, when administered in a large quantity during such short-term TPN, Leu can exert its metabolic effect without causing an imbalance in plasma amino acids under severe catabolic conditions.
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PMID:Metabolic effect of short-term total parenteral nutrition highly enriched with leucine or valine in rats recovering from severe trauma. 150 53

Three strains of Peptostreptococcus productus were tested for growth at the expense of methoxylated aromatic compounds. Strain M8A-18 (human fecal isolate) was unable to utilize methoxylated aromatic compounds. While the type strain ATCC 27340 (human septicemia isolate) was capable of minimal growth with methoxylated aromatic compounds, ATCC 35244 (sewage sludge isolate) displayed significant growth on methoxylated aromatic compounds. Methoxylated phenols, benzoates, benzyl alcohol and phenylacrylates supported the growth of ATCC 35244 and were O-demethylated to their respective hydroxylated derivatives. During O-methyl- or CO-dependent growth, the double bond of the acrylate side chain of certain methoxylated and non-methoxylated phenylacrylates was reduced. Although other aromatic substituent groups (-COOH and -CH3) were transformed during CO-dependent growth, in short-term growth studies, the aromatic ring was not subject to reduction or degradation. Of the three strains tested, only strain M8A-18 failed to grow at the expense of carbon monoxide (CO).
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PMID:Comparative evaluation of the metabolic potentials of different strains of Peptostreptococcus productus: utilization and transformation of aromatic compounds. 152 74

Sixty-four patients aged 2 to 18 years with advanced-stage Hodgkin's disease (HD) were treated on a Children's Cancer Study Group (CCSG) pilot toxicity study (521-P). Therapy consisted of 12 courses of Adriamycin (doxorubicin; Adria Laboratories, Columbus, OH), bleomycin, vinblastine, and dacarbazine (ABVD), followed by low-dose (2,100 cGy in 12 fractions) regional irradiation (RT). All patients were monitored for toxicity with particular attention to the pulmonary system. Six patients (9%) developed grade 3 or 4 pulmonary toxicity. Three had grade 3 toxicity based solely on changes in carbon monoxide diffusing capacity (DLCO) and remained well for more than 3 years after diagnosis. There was one fatality among the three symptomatic cases. In five cases, toxicity occurred prior to RT. One occurred after seven courses of ABVD, one after nine courses, and three after 10 courses. In one of these five cases, ABVD was stopped. The patient was given nitrogen mustard (mechlorethamine), vincristine, prednisone, and procarbazine (MOPP). This patient subsequently developed recurrence of HD and died of overwhelming sepsis. The other four continued on study and completed their chemotherapy. Three patients had no further bleomycin, and one continued bleomycin at 50% of the assigned dose. They all received mantle RT following chemotherapy, one with a boost dose to the mediastinum to 3,800 cGy and one with added RT to both lungs (1,050 cGy). In the sixth case of pulmonary toxicity, symptoms were first noticed 2 weeks after mantle RT to 3,500 cGy. This patient died of progressive respiratory failure. The event-free survival (EFS) and overall survival is 87% at 3 years. These early results indicate that this therapy is effective in advanced HD in children but has a 9% incidence of acute pulmonary toxicity.
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PMID:Efficacy and toxicity of 12 courses of ABVD chemotherapy followed by low-dose regional radiation in advanced Hodgkin's disease in children: a report from the Children's Cancer Study Group. 170 80


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