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Query: UMLS:C0036690 (
sepsis
)
59,461
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Four patients from a larger group of 18 patients receiving dextrose-free isotonic (3%) amino acid solution as nutritional support, form the basis of this report. An additional seven patients received intravenous isotonic (5%) dextrose as their sole support in the postoperative period following major elective surgery (average nitrogen balance = -12.3 +/- 2.7 g). All patients were well-nourished as determined by anthropometric measurements. The nonseptic patients receiving infusions of isotonic amino acids demonstrated an improvement in nitrogen balance (= delta 8.5 +2, P less than 0.001) when compared to the postoperative use of 100 to 150 g of glucose. However,
sepsis
produced a decreased net utilization of the infused crystalline amino acids such that nitrogen balance was similar to the intravenous glucose group (- 10.6 +/- 2.1). This septic response was associated with decreased plasma free fatty acid concentrations and the absence of starvation ketosis and ketonuria. While the nitrogen balance was not different in the septic and the dextrose control groups, deficiencies in plasma amino acid concentrations were observed in the group receiving intravenous infusion of glucose.
Am J Clin Nutr 1977
Sep
PMID:Effect of deep surgical sepsis on protein-sparing therapies and nitrogen balance. 40 78
We report three mildly ill infants who had meningococcal bacteremia and in whom meningitis or fulminant
septicemia
never developed. The infants were observed during a three-month period. Two of these infants had pneumonia, as evidenced by infiltrates on chest roentgenogram. The serogroups of the organisms isolated were B, Y, and 135. In none of the infants could specific bactericidal antibody be demonstrated in acute or convalescent serum.
Am J Dis Child 1977
Sep
PMID:Meningococcal bacteremia: clinical and serologic studies of infants with mild illness. 40 80
A new program of total parenteral nutrition (TPN) for surgical neonates has been described an investigated. The program is based on the use of fat emulsion as the major source of calories and infusion of large volumes of the solution via peripheral veins. This program has three main advantages over conventional hyperalimentation using a central venous catheter: (1) it avoids complications such as
septicemia
, thrombosis of large vessels, and metabolic complications such as hyperglycemia or osmotic diuresis; (2) it provides physiological nutritive elements containing a normal composition of glucose, protein, and fat; and (3) it is easy to start and manage the TPN using a peripheral vein. Thirty-four neonatal surgical patients with life-threatening gastrointestinal anomalies have been placed on this TPN program. Infusion of fat emulsion and large volumes of fluid were well tolerated and all patients gained weight during the period of observation.
Arch Surg 1977
Sep
PMID:Total parenteral nutrition using peripheral veins in surgical neonates. 40 73
Two cases of the membranous type of pyloric atresia are described and a review of 99 cases reported in the literature is presented. Excision and incision of diaphragm with pyloroplasty was performed on both cases. The first patient was alive following the second operation of gastroduodenostomy for postoperative stenosis. The second premature patient died of
sepsis
on the 58th postoperative day. The treatment should be surgical and the operative procedure should be chosen depending on the type of atresia. Excision or incision of the diaphragm with pyloroplasty and gastroduodenostomy are the procedures of choice. Gastrojejunostomy should be avoided because of its high mortality rate.
Jpn J Surg 1979
Sep
PMID:Congenital pyloric atresia--a report of two cases. 47 Feb 56
This communication describes a new surgical procedure of enlarging the narrow aortic valve ring by extending the aortic incision through the fibrous origin of the aortic leaflet of the mitral valve into this leaflet. A fusiform patch is sutured to the V-shaped defect in the aortic leaflet of the mitral valve and in the aortic anulus. This procedure permits the replacement of the aortic valve by a suitable prosthesis. Between June of 1976 and February of 1978, eight patients underwent this surgical procedure. At the time of operation the patients were between 8 and 50 years old. The estimated enlargement of the aortic root ranged from 10 to 25 mm. The operative technique is described, peculiarities of this method are discussed, and the results are reported. Six to 27 months following operation, the clinical condition of six patients is good. Four patients show no impairment of mitral valve function. In one case, preoperatively diagnosed mitral incompetence persists. In another patient the pericardial patch broke from the aortic leaflet of the mitral valve, so that the valve had to be replaced on the fourth postoperative day. One patient died of myocardial necrosis because of insufficient myocardial protection during operation. One child with acute aortic insufficiency caused by staphylococcal endocarditis and congestive heart failure died of
septicemia
3 months postoperatively. Mitral incompetence was not detectable in this child.
J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg 1979
Sep
PMID:Patch enlargement of the aortic valve ring by extending the aortic incision into the anterior mitral leaflet. New operative technique. 47 Apr 20
Chronic otitis media was the cause of
septicemia
in two hospitalized men. The organisms involved, K pneumoniae and B fragilis, are not usually associated with primary infections of the middle ear and would not have been traced to this site had proper cultures not been performed. In adults, the true incidence of bacteremia arising from the middle ear may be higher than suspected.
Postgrad Med 1979
Sep
PMID:Gram-negative bacteremia. Two cases in adults with chronic otitis media. 47 50
Glucose intolerance has been commonly observed in
sepsis
and has been attributed to a multitude of endocrine and metabolic disorders. From 1977 to 1978, 19 patients were studied using intravenous glucose tolerance tests to evaluate this phenomenon; 15 patients presented with ongoing
sepsis
and four patients served as stress controls. Glucose intolerance was found to be a significant finding in less than 40% of the septic group. This state of intolerance was noted to be associated with a high mortality rate (60%), whereas glucose tolerance in
sepsis
was associated with a much improved mortality rate (10%). Hormone levels were correlated with glucose tolerance curves using the parameters of insulin, glucagon, growth hormone, cortisol, and epinephrine levels. Glucose intolerance and a high mortality rate were linked to sustained hyperglucagonemia, which was unresponsive to glucose challenge, and to marked suppression of growth hormone. This apparently represents a decompensated peripheral metabolic energy deficit, which results in the increased mortality rate.
Surgery 1979
Sep
PMID:The sepsis-glucose intolerance riddle: a hormonal explanation. 47 28
Anastomotic failure complicated the postoperative course of 11 per cent of 350 gastric cancer patients who underwent total gastrectomy and esophagogastrectomy and was responsible for 33 per cent of all operative deaths. The extent of disease and the presence of tumor at the margin of resection did not prove to be significant factors in regard to the incidence of anastomotic failure. Gastrectomy combined with resection of other organs was associated with a significantly higher risk of failure. End-to-end esophagogastrectomy and esophagoduodenostomy appeared to be prone to failure, while Roux-en Y, jejunal pouch, and jejunal loop reconstructions were safer. Patients with severe intraabdominal or intrathoracic
sepsis
had a poor prognosis, and their management with surgical or conservative methods was ineffective. On the basis of these findings, alternatives to manual methods of visceral suturing should be considered.
Am J Surg 1979
Sep
PMID:Anastomotic failure complicating total gastrectomy and esophagogastrectomy for cancer of the stomach. 47 76
A 73-year-old patient with a cerebral abscess of tuberculous etiology localized in the left parietooccipital region is presented. Clinically it had behaved like an expansive process. The inside of the abscess contained a purulent exudate with polynuclear cells and necrotic material. The wall of the abscess was formed by a predominantly histiocytic internal layer and an external one composed by histiocytes with the morphology of epithelioid cells. No tuberculous granulomas were found. The histiocytes contained a large number of acid-alcohol resistant bacilli. In the exudate Mycobacterium tuberculosis hominis was bacteriologically isolated. After the surgical operation the patient developed an acute tuberculous
sepsis
with tuberculous exudative meningitis and miliary dissemination in various organs. As regards the pathogenesis of the tuberculous cerebral abscess the authors consider the possible influence of a deficitary immune state of the patient and the aggressiveness of the infective organism.
Med Clin (Barc) 1979
Sep
15
PMID:[Tuberculous cerebral abscess. Morphopathologic study (author's transl)]. 49 87
A prospective randomized matched pair study was designed to test the efficacy of the peritoneovenous (LeVeen) shunt as a treatment for massive cirrhotic ascites compared with traditional medical therapy. Patients who failed to lose weight while on a low salt diet and fluids restricted to 1000 ml daily were placed in the study group. Weight loss, decrease in abdominal girth and diuresis were significantly greater (P less than 0.01) for surgical patients than for their medically treated counterparts. The surgical technique is simple, quick and inexpensive. The surgical patients outlived their matched partners in 12 of 14 pairs where a definitive comparison was possible (P less than 0.02). The median stay in hospital after randomization was shortened from 32 days with medical therapy to 15 days for those undergoing the shunt operation. Those treated medically experienced a significant rise in mean blood urea nitrogen and K+ (P less than 0.02). Patients with alcoholic hepatitis, hyperbilirubinaemia (bilirubin greater than 154 mumol/l), peritoneal
sepsis
, severe coagulopathy and those who had recently bled from oesophageal varices are poor risks for the surgical procedure.
Br J Surg 1979
Sep
PMID:Randomized prospective matched pair study comparing peritoneovenous shunt and conventional therapy in massive ascites. 49 60
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