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Query: UMLS:C0036690 (
sepsis
)
59,461
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We report data on 43 patients with polyarteritis affecting the kidneys. The majority (41 patients) had renal histological evidence of microscopic polyarteritis. Although most patients (30 of 43) had significant renal impairment at the time of diagnosis (serum
creatinine
greater than 250 mumol/l) only five had a symptom, macroscopic haematuria, that directed attention to the kidneys. In the majority of patients in whom data was available there was rapid deterioration in renal function between presentation and diagnosis. Renal function at diagnosis was worse in patients aged over 50 of whom 20 out of 29 had a serum
creatinine
greater than 500 mumol/l compared with only four of 14 patients aged less than 50. The prognosis was worse in patients over 50 (41 per cent died), in patients with a serum
creatinine
higher than 500 mumol/l (54 per cent died) and in patients treated with intravenous methylprednisolone, (four also had intravenous cyclophosphamide) (38 per cent died). The major cause of death was
sepsis
and the actuarial one-year survival was 62 per cent. These results suggest that our approach to treatment should be modified towards lessening immunosuppression in older patients and in patients with renal failure at diagnosis.
...
PMID:Polyarteritis and the kidney. 288 38
The compatibility of etoposide (VP-16-213) and cisplatin (CDDP) in an admixture solution was established by High Pressure Liquid Chromatography (HPLC) studies in vitro at room temperature. A Phase I dual-dose escalation study of the admixture was subsequently carried out utilizing a 24-hour continuous infusion schedule administered for 3 consecutive days and repeated at 3 to 4 week intervals. Twenty-seven patients received a total of 42 treatment courses. The daily dose rates for VP-16-213 were 50, 75, and 100 mg/m2/day. Cisplatin was delivered at 20, 30, and 40 mg/m2/day for each dose level of VP-16-213. Dose-rate limiting toxicity was observed first at the VP-16 dose of 50 mg/m2/day and CDDP at 30 mg/m2/day. At 100 mg/m2/day for VP-16-213, six of 17 courses were associated with life-threatening leukopenia and four of six patients died with
sepsis
. All but one of the patients developing severe or life-threatening leukopenia had associated acute renal failure with serum
creatinine
levels greater than 2 mg/dl. The optimal dose rate of delivery for VP-16 and CDDP administered as a 72-hour infusion admixture is 75 mg/m2/day and 30 mg/m2/day, respectively.
...
PMID:Etoposide admixed with cisplatin. Phase I clinical investigation of 72-hour infusion. 291 88
We studied the efficiency and practicability of a new protocol for surveillance of nosocomial infection in 99 patients admitted to our intensive care unit (ICU) between October 1985 and March 1986. The protocol contained the therapy given before admission to the ICU and daily records of: (1) therapy suspected to increase the risk of nosocomial infection (ventilatory support, operations, hemofiltration, central venous and arterial catheters, Swan-Ganz catheters, etc.); (2) parameters possibly associated with bacterial infections (white blood cell count, body temperature, platelet count,
creatinine
clearance, hemodynamic values, clinical suspicion of infection, suspected site of infection, pathological chest X-ray, etc); and (3) bacteriologic data (results of cultures from blood, tracheal aspirate, urine, wound secretions) and antibiotic treatment.
Sepsis
was diagnosed in 28 patients, and 28 had positive blood cultures; these two groups were not identical. Twenty-nine patients died, more than half of them having a serious nosocomial infection. Factors associated with nosocomial infection were: fever greater than 38.5 degrees C, recurrent fever, leucocytosis, leucopenia, thrombocytopenia; duration of stay at the ICU; ventilatory support, operations, mass transfusions, and therapy with catecholamines. Use of a Swan-Ganz catheter and hemofiltration were associated with nosocomial infection, but they were usually begun after the clinical onset of
sepsis
. Therapy administered before admission to the ICU was not associated with nosocomial infection. Bacterial colonization of tracheal aspirate was detected in 2/3 of the ventilated patients. The most common bacteria isolated were staphylococci in blood cultures. Pseudomonas sp. and Candida albicans in tracheal secretions, and Candida albicans in urine cultures.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Application of an infection control protocol at an anesthesiology intensive care unit]. 292 67
Initially, poor long-term prognosis in patients with SLE and fear of recurrent disease dissuaded renal transplantation in this group of patients. However, in 1975 the Advisory Committee to the Renal Transplant Registry reported satisfactory 1-2-year results in 56 patients with SLE from 36 institutions. Subsequently, renal transplantation for SLE patients with end-stage renal disease has become more accepted, though it has been recommended that transplantation be postponed for at least one year after initiating dialysis. Five cases of recurrent lupus nephritis have been reported in the literature. However, since the long-term outcome after transplantation in this group of patients is not well established, we have examined the long-term outcome in SLE patients who underwent renal transplantation at the University of Minnesota. Thirty-two SLE patients receiving 33 transplants between December 1969 and December 1987 were studied retrospectively and compared with controls matched for age, sex, donor source, HLA match, date of transplant, and diabetic status. A total of 69% (22/32) of patients underwent less than 1 year of dialysis prior to transplantation, and 50% (16/32) experienced biopsy-proved acute rejection, which was reversible in 67% (11/16). Actuarial graft function and patient survival rate in SLE patients were not significantly different from those in the matched control group. Duration of prior dialysis did not affect outcome. Surviving grafts have excellent function as measured by serum
creatinine
(1.3 +/- 0.4 mg/dl, means +/- SD). Causes of death were
sepsis
(5) and myocardial infarction (1). One patient lost the graft from rejection after withdrawal of immunosuppression because of a malignancy one month posttransplant. Three patients lost graft function due to chronic rejection. To date no patients have had evidence of recurrent SLE nephritis.
...
PMID:Single-center 1-15-year results of renal transplantation in patients with systemic lupus erythematosus. 305 93
Fibronectin was given in the form of cryoprecipitate of human plasma to patients with severe surgical
sepsis
in a double blind, prospective and randomized clinical study. Of the 19 patients assigned to the control group receiving no fibronectin, only eight (42 per cent) survived. Of the 12 patients given the cryoprecipitate, nine survived (75 per cent) (p less than 0.05). In the control group, initial serum fibronectin levels were depressed to 121 micrograms per milliliter (normal = 313). The mean values in the blank plasma controls did not increase after 24 hours, with a mean of 122. In contrast, the group treated with cryoprecipitate increased serum fibronectin values after 24 hours to 216 micrograms per milliliter, up from initial values of 161 micrograms per milliliters. Improvements in pulmonary function, serum bilirubin and serum
creatinine
values were also noted, but the changes fell short of statistical significance. Fibronectin appears to benefit patients in severe surgical
sepsis
in this study of a relatively small number of patients.
...
PMID:Fibronectin in severe sepsis. 308 23
We undertook a study to determine the frequency, predisposing factors, and outcome in 315 patients admitted to a medical-surgical ICU, of whom 47 (14.9%) subsequently acquired renal insufficiency (ARI) during their stay in the unit. Four well-recognized risk factors for ARI were present alone or in combination in all episodes: hypotension,
sepsis
, aminoglycoside antibiotics, and radiocontrast dye. Hypotension was the most prevalent factor, present in 42 (85.8%) episodes, and was the sole factor present in 18 (36.7%). Patients with ARI but without hypotension all survived their ICU stay, while only 13 (33%) of 40 with hypotension survived (p less than .05). Neither initial, peak nor change in BUN or
creatinine
predicted mortality; oliguria was marginally associated with poor prognosis. Our findings indicate that: a) ARI was a frequent and important contributing factor to mortality in our critically ill patients, b) hypotension was the most common of well-recognized risk factors, and c) conditions that predisposed to ARI also predisposed to mortality, although mortality did not appear to depend on the severity of renal insufficiency.
...
PMID:Acquired renal insufficiency in critically ill patients. 316 3
We investigated the association between plasma catecholamines and the renal response to nonhypotensive
sepsis
. Arterial plasma catecholamines were measured in 16 sheep, before and 24 h after surgical induction of peritonitis. Animals were volume loaded with lactated Ringer's solution (8 L/24 h) before and after surgery; non became hypotensive. For analysis, animals were retrospectively divided into those with increased serum
creatinine
after 24 h of
sepsis
(group 1, n = 8) and those without (group 2, n = 8). Group 1 showed increased cardiac index and decreased systemic vascular resistance typical of severe
sepsis
, with decreased glomerular filtration rate (GFR), oliguria, sodium retention, increased plasma renin activity (PRA), decreased urinary kallikrein excretion, and increased urinary 6-keto-prostaglandin-F1 alpha excretion. Group 2 showed insignificant hemodynamic disturbance, and no significant renal response. Plasma catecholamines were equal in both groups at baseline. In group 1, there were uniform increases after 24 h in plasma norepinephrine (474 +/- 115 to 1183 +/- 158 [SEM] pg/ml; p less than .01) and plasma epinephrine (108 +/- 8 to 309 +/- 70 pg/ml; p less than .05). In group 2, neither plasma norepinephrine (343 +/- 59 to 330 +/- 56 pg/ml) nor plasma epinephrine (116 +/- 16 to 116 +/- 13 pg/ml) changed significantly. Plasma norepinephrine correlated inversely with GFR; plasma epinephrine correlated with PRA. The sympathetic nervous system may be involved in the renal response to nonhypotensive
sepsis
, both directly and via effects on other vasoactive hormone systems.
...
PMID:Association between renal and sympathetic responses to nonhypotensive systemic sepsis. 316 6
As many UK renal units commence more patients on CAPD than hemodialysis (HD) as the first mode of therapy a retrospective study of long-term CAPD (greater than 4 years continuous CAPD) was performed in 4 centers with substantial CAPD programs. One hundred and seventy-seven patients (103M, 74F) started CAPD before December, 1981. There was no difference in primary renal disease. Age was significantly greater in 2 units (51.9 +/- 11.7 and 53.2 +/- 12.1 vs 40.6 +/- 16.2 and 42.5 +/- 14.6 years, p less than 0.05) and correlates with pre-CAPD activity scores (Scale 3-0). After 4 years: 34 patients (19.2%) remained on CAPD: the proportion was similar in all centers. Sixty-five percent of patients were alive but 54% transferred to HD mainly due to peritonitis (overall 2.0 episodes/intercenter variation p less than 0.001). Fourty-four patients were transplanted. Significant increases occurred in hemoglobin, albumin, calcium and
creatinine
; a decrease in activity score (2.4 +/- 0.7 to 1.5 +/- 0.9, p less than 0.005); no change in weight, BP, urea or bone disease. Thirty-eight patients died, mainly cardiac (14) or
sepsis
(11). Using Cox's method of analysis significant risk multipliers were age (2.07 per decade), male sex (2.18), frequency of peritonitis (1.36), activity score less than 2 (4.45) and amyloidosis (12.45). Despite differing techniques in different centers CAPD offered a satisfactory mode of therapy for many patients; peritonitis was the main reason for transfer to HD and several significant factors were identified.
...
PMID:Long-term CAPD--some U.K. experience. 318 May 35
From August 1974 to January 1985, 53 patients (26 men; seven Maoris) mean age 45 (SD 15) years, with diabetes mellitus for a mean of 12 (SD nine) years had a renal biopsy and were followed. Indications for biopsy were nephrotic syndrome, proteinuria, renal impairment (five) and hematuria (one). Mean plasma
creatinine
concentration was 0.22 (SD 0.18) mmol/L and protein excretion 3.4 (SD 2.5) g/24 h. Diabetic nephropathy was demonstrated in 39 patients and significantly associated with retinopathy and insulin dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM). Of the 39 patients followed for 25.7 (SD 22.8) months, 18 had died (nine myocardial infarction, six uremia, two
sepsis
, one stroke) and nine had begun dialysis. The five-year cumulative renal survival was 28%. The presence of the nephrotic syndrome and the plasma
creatinine
concentration at presentation were the best predictors of survival. Diabetics with IDDM of 20 years duration, retinopathy and heavy proteinuria, who survive the other complications of their disease, are likely to have diabetic nephropathy requiring renal replacement therapy.
...
PMID:Renal disease in diabetics--which patients have diabetic nephropathy and what is their outcome? 324 62
The use of high-dose corticosteroids in the treatment of severe
sepsis
and septic shock remains controversial. Our study was designed as a prospective, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial of high-dose methylprednisolone sodium succinate for severe
sepsis
and septic shock. Diagnosis was based on the clinical suspicion of infection plus the presence of fever or hypothermia (rectal temperature greater than 38.3 degrees C [101 degrees F] or less than 35.6 degrees C [96 degrees F]), tachypnea (greater than 20 breaths per minute), tachycardia (greater than 90 beats per minute), and the presence of one of the following indications of organ dysfunction: a change in mental status, hypoxemia, elevated lactate levels, or oliguria. Three hundred eighty-two patients were enrolled. Treatment--either methylprednisolone sodium succinate (30 mg per kilogram of body weight) or placebo--was given in four infusions, starting within two hours of diagnosis. No significant differences were found in the prevention of shock, the reversal of shock, or overall mortality. In the subgroup of patients with elevated serum
creatinine
levels (greater than 2 mg per deciliter) at enrollment, mortality at 14 days was significantly increased among those receiving methylprednisolone (46 of 78 [59 percent] vs. 17 of 58 [29 percent] among those receiving placebo; P less than 0.01). Among patients treated with methylprednisolone, significantly more deaths were related to secondary infection. We conclude that the use of high-dose corticosteroids provides no benefit in the treatment of severe
sepsis
and septic shock.
...
PMID:A controlled clinical trial of high-dose methylprednisolone in the treatment of severe sepsis and septic shock. 330 74
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