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

Ampicillin-sensitive or -resistant Staphylococcus aureus and Klebsiella strains were cultured in various nutrient media as prototypes of the agents of sepsis isolated in bacteriological routine analysis. In each case, 2 ml of defibrinated human blood containing 100 and 1000 cells, 8 gamma and 80 gamma ampicillin/1 ml blood respectively were added to 50 ml of nutrient medium. The following media were used. 1. casein soya-bean meal peptone broth (Oxoid), 2. tryptose-phosphate medium (Oxoid), 3. dextrose broth (Oxoid), 4. brain-heart-dextrose medium (Oxoid), 5. brain-heart infusion, autoclaved (Difco), 6. brain-heart infusion, after sterile filtration (Difco), 7. vacutainer culture bottles (BD) prepared medium, 8. micrognost blood culture bottles (Biotest) prepared medium. While the sensitive staphylococcus strain exhibited a slower growth than the sensitive Klebsiella strain in all nutrient media, the growth rate of the two resistant variants was approximately the same for an initial count of 100 cells per ml of blood. Among the resistant staphylococci the higher initial count of the inoculum resulted in an improved growth. After addition of 8 gamma or 80 gamma ampicillin/1 ml blood the sensitive staphylococcus strain did not show any grwoth irrespective of the inoculated number of cells while the sensitive Klebsiella strain multiplied irrespective of the initial number of cells. After 24 hours the resistant staphylococci and Klebsiella strains of which 1000 cells each had been used for inoculation exhibited growth in almost all media used.
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PMID:[Experimental studies to culture bacteria from blood specimen with an addition of ampicillin in various nutrient media (author's transl)]. 37 22

Hypophosphatemia is common in hospitalized patients and occurs under a variety of circumstances other than parathyroid hormone excess. Charts of 100 inpatients with hypophosphatemia were reviewed and the patients divided into five groups on the basis of serum phosphate level: 18, 2.1 to 2.4 mg/dL; 49, 1.6 to 2.0 mg/dL; 20, 1.1 to 1.5 mg/dL; 12, 0.6 to 1.0 mg/dL; 1, 0.1 to 0.5 mg/dL. The effect of glucose ingestion on serum phosphate level was shown in one normal patient. Whenever carbohydrate was administered intravenously (45 cases), this was considered the primary cause of the hypophosphatemia. Other causes were as follows: diuretics, hyperalimentation, alcoholism, respiratory alkalosis, dialysis, insulin, corticosteroids, diabetic ketoacidosis, vomiting, phosphate-binding antacid, Gram-negative sepsis, primary hyperparathyroidism, saline, epinephrine, gastrointestinal malabsorption, and unknown. Hypophosphatemia in hospitalized patients may have multiple causes.
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PMID:Hypophosphatemia in hospitalized patients. 44 90

Ileostomy function was studied in 12 patients with an established ileostomy following proctocolectomy, in 6 of whom minimal amounts (less than 9 cm) and in 6 significant amounts (30-120 cm, mean 60 cm) of terminal ileum had been removed. Patients who had undergone significant ileal resection had daily faecal volumes considerably greater than those with minimal ileal resection (1202 +/- 284 ml versus 401 +/- 92 ml, P less than 0.001), and also greater daily outputs of sodium (146 +/- 53 mEq versus 43 +/- 12 mEq) and potassium (12.7 +/- 9.0 mEq versus 4.0 +/- 0.99 mEq). The percentage water content of the ileostomy fluid was greater in patients who had had the ileum resected (93.1 +/- 1.8% versus 89.8 +/- 2.5%). In addition, the sodium/potassium ratio in the urine in patients with a properly acting ileostomy after ileal resection was low. It is concluded that when recurrent inflammatory bowel disease, partial small bowel obstruction and intraperitoneal sepsis have been excluded there remains a number of patients whose high ileostomy output is due entirely to the amount of ileum resected. The management of patients with a high output ileostomy with codeine phosphate, Lomotil and oral administration of sodium chloride tablets is discussed.
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PMID:Cause and management of high volume output salt-depleting ileostomy. 117 16

The present study was designed to determine the gastric hemodynamics in a septic model that causes both a hyperdynamic state and acute erosive gastritis. Sepsis was established in twelve pigs by the intramuscular shank injection of Pastuerella multocida (42 X 10(8) colonies) in triptose phosphate broth; four pigs received sterile broth injections (shams) and eight received sterile saline injections (controls). After 18 hours, cardiac output was measured by both the cardiogreen dilution technic and the radioactive microsphere dilution technic; cardiac output was then compared to total and regional gastric blood flow measured by the raioactive microsphere entrapment technic. Acute erosive gastritis developed in septic pigs in the fundus and body of the stomach; the antrum was spared. Cardiac output was significantly increased in septic pigs compared with sham and control pigs. Total gastric blood flow and regional blood flow to the fundus, body, and antrum were also increased in direct proportion to the increase in cardiac output. These data suggest that acute erosive gastritis is primarily due to an end-organ cellular insult from sepsis and is not primarily due to a decrease or redistribution in gastric blood flow.
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PMID:Gastritis and gastric blood flow in hyperdynamic septic pigs. 124 58

Endotoxin (lipopolysaccharide [LPS])-induced cytokine release has been implicated in the pathogenesis of sepsis. Sublethal doses of LPS induce tolerance to a septic insult. This study evaluated pretreatment with interleukin 1 (IL-1) against an LPS challenge and examined its relationship to endotoxin tolerance. C3H/HeN mice (N = 100) were injected intraperitoneally with phosphate-buffered saline (control group), IL-1 (200 micrograms/kg), or LPS (1 mg/kg) for 3 days. On day 5, peritoneal macrophages were harvested and assayed for antimicrobial activity (superoxide anion production and Candida albicans phagocytosis). Serum cytokine levels and survival after an LPS challenge on day 5 were also assessed. Pretreatment with IL-1 or LPS significantly increased superoxide anion production, C albicans phagocytosis, and survival compared with pretreatment with phosphate-buffered solution. Interleukin 6 levels significantly decreased in the IL-1 and LPS groups. Peak levels of tumor necrosis factor significantly decreased only in the LPS group. Thus, pretreatment with IL-1 or low doses of LPS may exert protective effects by decreasing levels of interleukin 6 while increasing antimicrobial activity. Mice pretreated with IL-1 were protected from endotoxin despite elevated peak levels of tumor necrosis factor, suggesting a different mechanism for endotoxin tolerance than for tolerance to tumor necrosis factor.
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PMID:Interleukin 1 and its relationship to endotoxin tolerance. 131 50

Mechanisms of progression of chronic renal failure (CRF) have been well documented in the rat but may not be relevant in man. Factors which may modify clinical CRF include underlying disease, diet, hypertension, intercurrent events, and adverse or beneficial effects of drug therapy. It has been argued that progression in many forms of renal disease is inexorable below a certain level of renal function. In other diseases, eg primary malignant hypertension, analgesic nephropathy, function frequently improves in both the short and long term with appropriate management. Thus knowledge of the nature of the underlying disease is essential in assessing progression. The value of diet in preserving renal function has been debated, particularly the relative roles of protein and phosphate control. In our own unit, a prospective randomized study showed a benefit of protein restriction. Development of accelerated hypertension is an important cause of progression of renal disease and clinical and experimental evidence supports the view that non-accelerated hypertension is also a factor in progression, amenable to treatment. Various intercurrent events may accelerate progression and function may be lost permanently following sepsis, urinary tract obstruction, renal arterial or venous obstruction, hypotension and in some cases pregnancy. Numerous drugs can have deleterious effects on the kidney. The possibility that converting enzyme inhibitors might preserve renal function is attracting attention but in view of their side effects their place in therapy should be determined by prospective controlled studies in which the above factors are carefully considered.
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PMID:Preservation of renal function in chronic renal failure. 141 42

The leading cause of postoperative morbidity in patients undergoing major head and neck surgical procedures is postoperative infection. This prospective randomized multi-institutional clinical trial was designed to compare the effectiveness of clindamycin phosphate and high-dose cefazolin sodium therapy in preventing postoperative wound sepsis in patients undergoing contaminated head and neck surgical procedures in which flap reconstruction was required. Either clindamycin phosphate (900 mg) or cefazolin sodium (2 g) therapy was instituted intravenously prior to surgery and continued every 8 hours, for a total of 24 hours. The patients received postoperative follow-up, and the wounds were graded according to the worst condition observed. One hundred cases were evaluated. Fifty-one patients received clindamycin and 49 patients received high doses of cefazolin; wound infection developed in 10 patients (19.6%) and 11 patients (21.6%), respectively. This difference was not statistically significant. The average duration of surgery was approximately 8 hours for both the infected and the noninfected groups of patients. High-dose cefazolin and clindamycin have similar efficacy when administered prophylactically under these circumstances. Reconstruction with free vascularized tissue may aid in reducing postoperative wound infection.
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PMID:Prophylactic antibiotics for head and neck surgery with flap reconstruction. 157 Nov 18

Hepatocellular dysfunction, as a result of sepsis or endotoxemia, plays a critical role in the pathogenesis of multiple systems organ failure. Conventional methods to assay hepatic ATP require large tissue samples, making repeat measurements in the same animal impossible, and are unable to detect the minimal changes in metabolism consistent with early or reversible cellular injury. 31P NMR is a modality available for the in vivo measurement of high energy phosphates. Inorganic phosphate (Pi) and phosphomonoester (PME) ratios (markers of cellular metabolism and viability) as well as fractionated ATP may be repeatedly quantitated. To assess the early effects of endotoxemia on hepatic function, phosphorus spectra of the liver were obtained using a 1.7-cm surface coil in six rats after the ip administration of 4 mg/kg Escherichia coli lipopolysaccharide. Conventional assay was performed on 24 matched controls. Pi, PME, alpha-, beta-, and gamma-ATP peaks (expressed as percentage total signal area) were collected over 20 min, integrated, and analyzed. Pi/beta-ATP decreased over time until 6 hr reflecting ongoing uptake of inorganic phosphate and continued cellular metabolism. PME/beta-ATP ratios, which indicate cellular viability, became significantly elevated at 6 hr. Using 31P NMR, beta-ATP best reflected the early subtle energy changes present prior to cell death and subsequent organ failure with significant decreases at 2, 4, and 6 hr. Conventional assay for ATP confirmed similar trends. We conclude that 31P NMR is a valuable tool for the study of reversible hepatic energy changes during early endotoxemia.
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PMID:In vivo [31P]NMR assessment of early hepatocellular dysfunction during endotoxemia. 161 20

Hypertriglyceridemia and fatty liver are common lipid abnormalities associated with Gram-negative sepsis. Fish oils have been shown to have beneficial effects in reducing plasma triglycerides (TG). This study was designed to investigate whether fish oils would prevent the elevation of plasma TG and the accumulation of liver lipids during sepsis. One group of rats was fed a 10% menhaden oil diet and the other group was fed a 10% corn oil diet for 14 days. On the 14th day, sepsis was induced by injecting the rats with 8 x 10(7) live Escherichia coli colonies/100 g of body weight and the rats were fasted for 22 hours. The liver composition of total lipids and TG in the septic rats prefed the fish oil was lower than in the septic rats prefed the corn oil. In the rats adapted to the corn oil diet, lipids accumulated in the livers of the septic rats in comparison with the control rats. Hepatocytes isolated from the septic rats adapted to the corn oil diet showed an increased esterification of [1-14C]palmitate into TG and phospholipids than hepatocytes from the control rats. Feeding the fish oil diet instead of the corn oil diet before inducing sepsis reduced TG, cholesterol, and phospholipid synthesis by 58%, 79%, and 71%, respectively. The rise in TG synthesis in the septic rats prefed the corn oil diet was associated with an 89% increase in the activity of phosphatidate phosphohydrolase. There was no significant difference in the activities of glycerol-3-phosphate acyltransferase and phosphatidate phosphohydrolase between control and septic rats.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Adaptation to a fish oil diet before inducing sepsis in rats prevents fatty infiltration of the liver. 164 Jun 34

The effects of sepsis on skeletal muscle energetics and membrane function are poorly understood, and the time course of changes in energy metabolism are unclear. To clarify these relationships, high energy phosphate ratios, intracellular pH, and phosphocreatine breakdown rates were measured in vivo in the gastrocnemius muscle of adult male Wistar rats after cecal ligation and puncture or sham operation with 31P magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Adenosine triphosphate (ATP) concentration and Na(+)-K+ ATPase and creatine kinase activities were determined in vitro. Within 24 hours, Na(+)-K+ ATPase activity increased by 60% in rats with cecal ligation and puncture, all of which had positive bacterial cultures, as compared to none of the sham-operated controls. Phosphocreatine/ATP ratios decreased by 20% in association with a quantitatively similar increase in phosphocreatine breakdown (9.7 +/- 0.5 vs 11.9 +/- 0.5 mumoles/gm wet wt/sec; p = 0.01). ATP concentrations were maintained, and intracellular pH did not change significantly. In this model, changes in phosphocreatine breakdown were not related to total creatine kinase activity, which did not change significantly, or increases in adenosine 5'-diphosphate (ADP) concentration (62 +/- 8 vs 92 +/- 8 mumols/L; p = 0.02). Thus, in early sepsis before a measurable decrease in pH occurs, ATP is utilized at an increased rate to help maintain ionic balance and/or to support other metabolic processes. Phosphocreatine stores are used to buffer ATP concentrations.
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PMID:Sepsis alters skeletal muscle energetics and membrane function. 165 38


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