Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0036690 (sepsis)
59,461 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We have recently experienced a case of Vibrio vulnificus septicemia which occurred in a patient with hepatic cirrhosis, and as we were able to give early antibiotic treatment, the patient survived. We would like to report this case here together with another case experienced 2 years ago. Case 1 was a 58-year-old male who was attending our hospital as an outpatient for hepatic cirrhosis. At 5:30 pm on August 8, 1987, he consumed abalone and giant clam and at 9 pm complained of high fever with shaking chills. He was admitted to our department as an emergency case. Cefoperazone was administered resulting in a decline of fever on the following day. During the course of treatment he fell transiently into pre-DIC, but due mainly to the administration of antibiotics his condition was subsided. Case 2 was a 53-year-old male who was under medical care in our hospital for grave hepatic cirrhosis. On October 11, 1985, he consumed sushi and two days later suffered chills and pyrexia. A blood culture revealed Vibrio vulnificus. His condition improved transiently with administration of Cefazolin, but oliguria, hypotension and ascites occurred subsequently, and finally the patient died on the 22nd day.
...
PMID:[Two case reports of septic shock due to Vibrio vulnificus with liver cirrhosis]. 250 32

Localized suppuration involving the spinal cord is uncommon. A case of spinal subdural empyema is reported. The patient is 54-year-old male who had been suffering a diabetes mellitus but did not receive any treatment. His initial symptom was lumbago. Then he noticed a palpitation and general malaise which made him visit a hospital. Because he did not show any improvement by a fluid therapy, he was transferred to our institute for the further evaluation. On admission, physical examination showed no abnormality. Blood pressure was 170/90 mmHg, heart rate 128/min. and body temperature 37.1 degrees C suggesting a septic shock state. Neurological examination revealed slight consciousness disturbance, mild tetraparesis and bilateral hypesthesia lower than the level of L3. Laboratory examination showed the elevated leukocyte count and fasting blood sugar and urine ketone body levels of 20,500/mm3, 257 mg/dl and 226 mg/dl respectively. Blood culture proved a septicemia of Streptococcus agalactiae afterwards. On the second day of admission, lumbar puncture revealed a purulent cerebrospinal fluid, though X-ray CT of lumbar spine did not confirm a diagnosis. Spinal magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) revealed a widespread abnormal intensity of the spinal canal from the level of Th11 to L4. On the T1-weighted image (TR 300 msec., TE 40 msec.), cerebrospinal fluid space was abnormally isointense. On the T2-weighted image (TR 2,000 msec., TE 80 msec.), subdural and cerebrospinal space was filled with an abnormal high-intense lesion especially on the ventral side. He developed semicoma due to hydrocephalus following a intraventricular empyema. He was also complicated disseminated intravascular coagulation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Spinal subdural empyema diagnosed by MRI and recovered by conservative treatment]. 257 46

A 60 year-old man was admitted to our hospital because of gait disturbance and dizziness. At 57 years of age, he noticed his walking unstable. After then, he had dizziness due to orthostatic hypotension, urinary difficulty, loss of livid, and forgetfulness. Neurological examination revealed he had severe orthostatic hypotension, cerebellar ataxia, dysarthria, hyperreflexia of four limbs, myoclonus of right leg, and atonic bladder. His brain CT showed cerebellar atrophy. Thereafter he had recurrent syncopic attacks. His gait disturbance progressed steadily, so he became bedridden. In his terminal stage, his limbs showed rigidity. About 3 years later he died of pneumonia and sepsis. At autopsy brain weighted 1,230 g. Glossly the putamens was bilaterally shrunken, the color of the substantia nigra and locus ceruleus became pale. Base of the pons and the cerebellum were atrophic. Microscopical examination confirmed the degeneration of striato-nigral and olivo-ponto-cerebellar systems without Lewy body. In the spinal cord there was depletion of neuronal cells in the intermediolateral nuclei and Onufrowitz nuclei. In addition to the conventional neuropathological staining methods, we performed the immunohistochemical studies using monoclonal antibody against synthetic peptide of beta protein which detected senile plaque of every stages with formic acid pretreatment, and compared to the modified Bielschowsky method and Congo red method. Our case showed many very primitive and primitive senile plaque in neocortices and hippocampal region. A few neurofibrally tangle were seen in hippocampus. We supposed our case might combine multiple system atrophy and Alzheimer' pathology.
...
PMID:[An autopsy case of multiple system atrophy with many senile plaques]. 262 28

A boy, aged 14 1/2 years, presented with Burkitt leukemia. His renal status was normal before treatment. Chemotherapy (SFOP LMB 86 protocol) was begun Oct. 9, 1986. After the first 2 courses of chemotherapy, the patient had Gram negative sepsis treated with cefotaxime, netilmycine, Vancomycin and ornidazole. During sepsis, nephrotic syndrome developed (albumin 25 g/l, non selective proteinuria 15 g/24 h), with moderately high blood pressure, functional renal failure (creatinine 141 mumols/l, U/P urea = 20), polyuria and tubular damage. Kidney ultrasonography was normal. Needle biopsy showed minimal glomerular lesions, acute tubular lesions, and no deposits in immunofluorescence. The nephrotic syndrome disappeared within 3 weeks, with treatment of leukemia. He is at present in complete remission with a follow-up of 25 months.
...
PMID:[Nephrotic syndrome and B leukemia]. 262 44

The effect of sterile inflammation and chronic sepsis on the plasma and hepatic free amino acid concentrations was determined. Relative to control animals, only minor alterations in the plasma amino acid concentrations were observed in sterile inflammation and sepsis. In liver, concentrations of alanine, serine, threonine, asparagine, proline, and glycine were significantly increased to the same extent in sterile inflammation and sepsis, while hepatic glutamine concentrations were significantly decreased. Compared with sterile inflammation, the branched-chain amino acid concentrations were depressed in the liver of septic animals. Following administration of dichloroacetate, hepatic alanine concentrations were significantly reduced more than threefold in each of the conditions examined; in contrast, significant increases in hepatic concentrations of threonine, glycine, glutamine, glutamate, histidine, and proline were observed. Also following administration of dichloroacetate, the branched-chain amino acid concentrations were all significantly elevated in each of the conditions examined, and plasma alanine concentrations were significantly decreased, while those of glutamine and glycine were significantly increased. These results demonstrate that there is a disassociation between the plasma and hepatic concentration of free amino acids in sterile inflammation and sepsis. Furthermore, the results demonstrate that some of the alterations in hepatic amino acid metabolism may be reversed pharmacologically by dichloroacetate.
...
PMID:Effect of dichloroacetate on plasma and hepatic amino acids in sterile inflammation and sepsis. 267 41

The precise roles of carnosine and histamine in the physiologic response of the cardiovascular system to stress are unknown. We have previously shown in skeletal and cardiac muscle that carnosine serves as a histidine reservoir available for subsequent histamine synthesis following trauma and sepsis. This study was designed to quantify the effect of histamine-releasing and blocking agents on the myocardial carnosine-histamine pathway as well as on survival during severe stress. Four groups of mature (9-month-old) Sprague-Dawley rats were treated with either (1) saline, (2) lodoxamide (L, mast cell degranulation inhibitor), (3) compound 48/80 (a mast cell degranulator which causes stress), or (4) L followed by 48/80, and observed until agonal or the end of 30 min. When either endpoint was reached the animals were sacrificed and their hearts were removed for tissue analyses of histidine, histamine, 3-methylhistamine, and carnosine via high-pressure liquid chromatography. All five L-pretreated animals survived challenge with 48/80 while all five animals given 48/80 alone died (P less than .005). This mortality correlated well with the increase in the myocardial levels of histidine (P less than or equal to .0005), histamine (P less than or equal to .0077), and 3-methylhistamine (P less than or equal to .0004) and the decrease in carnosine (P less than or equal to .009) experienced by the animals treated with 48/80 alone in comparison to the control, L-only- and L + 48/80-treated groups. A protective effect of L was shown against the deleterious effects of 48/80 which is associated with prevention of myocardial carnosine mobilization to histidine and histamine. These data support the role of carnosine as a nontoxic myocardial histidine reservoir which is mobilized in response to stress-induced increases in histamine requirements.
...
PMID:Improved survival from compound 48/80-induced lethal stress and inhibition of myocardial histamine and carnosine mobilization by lodoxamide. 270 50

A new born infant who died when he was 40 days old, after urinary infection, septicemia and disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) is reported. The concentration of fibronectin (FN) was undetectable (less than 1.1 mg/dl). His mother and one sister had also decreased levels (19 and 19.5 mg/dl), although inside normal limits, when they were compared to simultaneously studied normal controls (27 +/- 8). There were not infections, coagulation disturbs neither keloid scars in the family. A patient cousin also died at the first days of life. The deficiency of our case was much more important that FN levels found in 23 children with sepsis and DIC (range 6-38 mg/dl), therefore it is possible he had a primary deficiency. The investigation of FN levels in all newborns with severe infections or other disturbs is recommended, since these patients could be benefit from purified FN or cryoprecipitate therapy.
...
PMID:[Absence of fibronectin in a 40-day-old child who died as a result of septicemia with disseminated intravascular coagulation]. 271 Dec 87

A patient with T-polyagglutinable red cells and a severe coagulopathy provided an opportunity to observe the results of plasma transfusion in the face of T-activation. The patient was a 52-year-old Navajo Indian with a perforated gall bladder and related sepsis due to Clostridium perfringens. The gall bladder was removed surgically. Postoperatively, he had severe thrombocytopenia, and prolonged partial thromboplastin and prothrombin times. The patient's red cells were agglutinated by Arachis hypogaea and Glycine soja lectins but were unagglutinated by extracts of Salvia horminum, Salvia sclarea, and Bandeiraea simplicifolia. No untoward reactions or any evidence of hemolysis were observed when the patient was given platelet concentrates and 4 units of single-donor plasma. Serial plasma hemoglobin and haptoglobin levels documented that there was no hemolysis. His coagulopathy responded, and he had a successful surgical re-exploration and recovery. This case documents that serious adverse consequences do not necessarily follow transfusion of plasma in a recipient with T-activated red cells. T-activation is a relative but not absolute contraindication to plasma transfusion.
...
PMID:Uneventful administration of plasma products in a recipient with T-activated red cells. 286

We report a six year old male with mental retardation, postaxial polydactyly and syndactyly, atrichia congenita totalis, severe seborrhoeic dermatitis, recurrent staphylococcal skin sepsis, and Perthes' disease of the hip. His birth may have resulted from an incestuous mating.
...
PMID:Unknown syndrome: mental retardation with postaxial polydactyly, congenital absence of hair, severe seborrhoeic dermatitis, and Perthes' disease of the hip. 296 61

A 26-year-old male homosexual initially presented with Listeria monocytogenes sepsis and a small cell carcinoma of the rectum. His subsequent course included esophageal candidiasis, Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia, and severe T-lymphocyte abnormalities on immunologic testing, consistent with the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). This represents the first case of AIDS associated with this unusual tumor and Listeria infection.
...
PMID:Listeria monocytogenes sepsis and small cell carcinoma of the rectum: an unusual presentation of the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. 298 27


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>