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Query: UMLS:C0036690 (
sepsis
)
59,461
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Two boys aged up to 2 weeks suffered from enterobacter-
sepsis
. In both cases osteomyelitis developed in spite of treatment with Gentamycin or Gentamycin combined with Chepazolin. Both children were, taking accont of the risks, then treated with
Chloramphenicol
(100 mg/kg body weight/24 hours) and the first patient also, for a short time, with tetracyclin. In the second patient we saw a marrow depression dependent on
Chloramphenicol
and its dosage which disappeared rapidly, when the drug was withheld.
...
PMID:[Enterobacter-osteomyelitis in two neonates (author's transl)]. 123 63
We describe a 7-years boy by with a meningococcal
sepsis
due to Neisseria Meningitidis, with very serious evolution of cutaneous necrosis, initial D.I.C. and heart failure. The clinical picture do not improve with antibiotic therapy (
CAF
-penicillin), but the association ceftriaxone + tobramycin results in rapid improvement. The cutaneous necrosis, especially evident on gluteus, arms and legs, were treated locally with AgNO3 and penicillin-solution. After 4 weeks of treatment, also this cutaneous involvement improved and now the boy is healthy, without residual signs neither systemic nor cutaneous.
...
PMID:[A case of meningococcal sepsis]. 210 79
Tatumella ptyseos, the type species for the genus Tatumella, is a newly established member of the Family Enterobacteriaceae. It is a Gram-negative, oxidase negative, fermentative rod that grows on Mac Conkey agar. This first isolate was obtained from the blood culture of a neonate having neonatal jaundice with presumed
sepsis
. The organism was in vitro sensitive to Gentamicin,
Chloramphenicol
, Cotrimoxazole and Ampicillin. The patient was treated with Ampicillin and Gentamicin and recovered uneventfully.
...
PMID:The first isolate of Tatumella ptyseos in Malaysia. 263 96
Melioidosis prevails in Southeast Asia and northern Australia. Sporadic cases have been increasingly reported from countries located between 20 degrees north latitude and 20 degrees south latitude as well as in travelers and in soldiers who have resided in these areas. The organisms are commonly found in water and soil and are usually transmitted to humans by cutaneous or respiratory routes. Clinical manifestations range from subclinical infection to overwhelming
septicemia
that resembles disseminated or localized suppurative infection due to various pathogens. A rapid and accurate diagnosis can be made by demonstration of small, few, and frequently bipolar-stained gram-negative bacilli in exudate or pus. The indirect hemagglutination test is of diagnostic value in cases with involvement of the internal organs or pyrexia of unknown origin.
Chloramphenicol
, doxycycline, trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole, and kanamycin constitute conventional and effective chemotherapy. Newer antimicrobial agents such as piperacillin, amoxillin-clavulanic acid, ceftazidime, imipenem, and carumonam are active in susceptibility tests against the causative microorganism, Pseudomonas pseudomallei. Clinical trials for demonstration of the effectiveness of the latter agents in overwhelming septicemic melioidosis are ongoing in endemic areas.
...
PMID:Melioidosis: review and update. 207 71
A 15 year old patient with acute lymphoblastic leukemia, previously diagnosed as being a salmonella carrier, developed S. typhimurium
sepsis
after allogeneic bone marrow transplantation, in spite of pretreatment with chloramphenicol. Clinical improvement and termination of salmonella excretion were achieved by treatment with multiple antibiotics. Another patient with acute lymphoblastic leukemia, a 3 year old boy not previously identified as a salmonella carrier, also developed
sepsis
and osteomyelitis, together with pathological fractures during chemotherapy.
Chloramphenicol
, administered after isolation of S. typhimurium from blood cultures, led to resolution of the bony defects, complete recovery, and cessation of salmonella excretion. Selective cultures for salmonellae seem indicated in patients with malignant diseases, prior to chemotherapy.
...
PMID:[Systemic salmonella infections in chemotherapy in 2 children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia]. 266 43
The toxic components of supernatants from Pseudomonas aeruginosa cultures directed against HeLa cells and Staphylococcus aureus were evaluated with the aim of discovering interactions. Supernatants of eight different strains of P. aeruginosa were assayed for cytotoxic activity. All were active against HeLa cells; seven were toxic for S. aureus. On repeated suspension of P. aeruginosa in 0.9% sodium chloride solution, a shift from HeLa cell toxicity to staphylococcal lytic activity occurred along with a change of toxic activity from a high (50,000 +/- 5,000) to a low (8,000 +/- 400) molecular weight (MW) range on gel filtration. Addition of protein to the minimal medium of cultures producing material toxic only for S. aureus reactivated the generation of HeLa cell-toxic material. Cultivation of P. aeruginosa in the presence of HeLa cells and a chloramphenicol supplement produced suppression of the generation of material toxic for S. aureus but facilitated that of HeLa-toxic material of high MW. Adaptation of toxicity against fibroblasts developed only on cocultivation of P. aeruginosa together with S. aureus and in the presence of fibroblasts. Under these conditions a strong lytic activity for S. aureus appeared, even in the presence of chloramphenicol.
Chloramphenicol
caused the material toxic for fibroblasts to elute at a low MW well separated from that toxic for HeLa cells. In contrast to the high-MW toxic substances, the low-MW material did not induce antibodies after injection into rabbits. This may explain failures of vaccination against P. aeruginosa infection and of serum therapy of homologous
sepsis
in humans.
...
PMID:Variation and adaptation of Pseudomonas aeruginosa toxicity to HeLa cells and fibroblasts. 309 24
Seventy one files of patients with yeasts
septicemia
have been studied. This study indicates the influence of factors like age (greater than 50 years), health condition, surgery mainly digestive, severe associated bacterial infections, iatrogenic factors (polyantibiotherapy, catheters, intubation), in the occurrence of these
septicemia
). Clinical symptoms appear to be mainly fever (93%) accompanied with shudders (26%) and toxi-infectious shock (45%). Diagnosis is made by the isolation of yeasts from the blood cultivated on Sabouraud-
Chloramphenicol
diphasic medium. Among the responsible yeasts, the genus Candida is predominant (82.2%) with C. albicans (59%) followed by the genera Torulopsis (13.7%) and Trichosporon (2.7%). Medical treatment must associate Amphotericin B and 5 Fluorocytosine.
...
PMID:[Septicemias caused by Candida and other yeasts. Study of cases observed for 5 years at the University Hospital Center in Strasbourg]. 342 89
Overwhelming infections caused by encapsulated bacteria, salmonella spp. and Plasmodium falciparum (in malarious areas) are an important cause of morbidity and death in patients with sickle cell disease. Bacterial infections afflicting these patients include fulminant meningitis and septicaemia caused by Str. pneumoniae and H. influenzae type b, and non-typhoid salmonellosis. Children less than five years of age are at greatest risk for meningitis and septicaemia, while salmonella osteomyelitis is probably common to all age groups. The most important contributing factors to this increased susceptibility to encapsulated bacteria are: a state of functional asplenia, an opsonophagocytic defect due to an abnormality of the alternative complement pathway, and a deficiency of specific circulating antibodies. Devitalisation of gut and bone due to repetitive vaso-occlusive crises, saturation of the macrophage system with red cell breakdown products of chronic haemolysis, and underlying splenic and hepatic dysfunction all predispose to salmonella infections. Seventy per cent of septicaemias and meningitis among under-fives with sickle cell disease is caused by Str. pneumoniae.
Septicaemia
frequently presents with sudden fever, few prodromal features, and a deceptive appearance of well-being, followed within hours by rapid relentless progression to shock and death. Adrenal haemorrhage is common, and mortality can be as high as 50 per cent, unless intravenous antibiotic, with or without steroid therapy, is promptly initiated. The clinical presentation of bacterial meningitis, its management and mortality follow the normal patterns, but recurrent meningitis and cerebrovascular morbidity are common in patients with sickle cell disease. An acute pulmonary involvement, indistinguishable from bacterial pneumonia (the 'chest syndrome') is the commonest single complication of sickle cell disease at any age. Str. pneumoniae is responsible for about half of the episodes. The protective values of the pneumococcal vaccine and long-term penicillin prophylaxis remain to be established in sickle cell disease. Over 70 per cent of haematogenous osteomyelitis in sickle cell disease is caused by salmonellae. The distinction from vaso-occlusive bone crisis is often difficult, but the presence of multiple, often symmetrical bone involvement, diaphyseal fissuring and involucrum should suggest osteomyelitis rather than bone infarction.
Chloramphenicol
remains the drug of choice and often has to be given in high doses for up to six weeks. The role of surgery is limited by the presence of multiple bone involvement and the known anaesthetic risks in this group.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Sickle cell disease and infection. 631 9
Fifty-six evaluable patients with advanced ovarian carcinoma (FIGO III or IV), without prior cytotoxic chemotherapy, were studied to assess the activity of single-agent moderate-dose cyclophosphamide, 40 mg/kg to a maximum dose of 3000 mg, given intravenously as a bolus injection every 3 weeks. All patients were treated as outpatients. Moderate-dose cyclophosphamide resulted in 36 (64%) objective responses (19 CR, 17 PR). Nausea and severe vomiting occurred in all patients, but no patient needed hospitalization for this complication. Other side-effects observed were alopecia (100%), leukocytes less than or equal to 2500/microliters (18%), chemical cystitis (11%) and
sepsis
(4%). The median duration of response was 11 months, and the estimated median survival by the life-table method for responders was 16 months and for non-responders 4 months (P less than 0.001). Clinical trials previously performed by our group comparing cyclophosphamide alone, either vs cis-platinum, adriamycin and hexamethylmelamine or vs Hexa-
CAF
, showed a better remission rate with the use of moderate-dose cyclophosphamide alone. Therefore we suggest further investigation of this agent in a moderate dose in disseminated ovarian carcinoma.
...
PMID:Moderate-dose cyclophosphamide for disseminated ovarian carcinoma: a phase II study. 668 84
Thirty-six patients were operated upon for terminal ileal perforations in a two-year period; four cases were due to trauma, four to ascariasis and 28 to typhoid. Ileal perforations due to ascaris worms are differentiated from typhoid ileal perforations because worms are usually found lying freely in the peritoneal cavity or in close association with the perforations. Also, tests for Salmonellae and Shigella are usually negative. Factors affecting mortality and morbidity in typhoid ileal perforation include the age of the patient, duration of perforation before surgery, presence of additional complications, such as massive rectal bleeding, the extent of the surgery, and the number of perforations present.
Chloramphenicol
in massive doses is indicated for all these patients. Our experience suggests that the hematoxicity of this drug has been over-rated. Postoperative complications are: wound infection (about 95% of cases), malarial fever,
septicemia
, fecal fistula, intraabdominal abscess, pulmonary infection, jaundice and transient psychosis.
...
PMID:Typhoid perforation: factors affecting mortality and morbidity. 716 Sep 89
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