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Query: UMLS:C0036690 (
sepsis
)
59,461
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A comparative histologic study of plancentas aborted after infusion of hypertonic saline or prostaglandin F2alpha into the amniotic cavity toinduce abortion is presented. Five placentas from spontaneous abortions served as controls.
Saline
abortion produced edema of the membranes; congested,dilated, thrombotic blood vessels; and subchorionic necrosis. Prostaglandin did not produce edema, but created marked vasospasm as evidenced by thickened vessels without subchorionic necrosis. The absence of serious
sepsis
and defibrination in prostaglandin-induced abortions is probably related to the absence of tissue necrosis.
...
PMID:A histologic study of the placentas of patients with saline- and prostaglandin-induced abortion. 94 Jun 54
Two models of
sepsis
were investigated using rabbits. In the first model, rabbits given lipopolysaccharide (LPS) were treated with saline (group II) or CD18 monoclonal antibody (MAb) 60.3 (group III). Group I animals received no LPS. Cardiac output was maintained by infusion of lactated Ringer solution with group II (95 +/- 68 ml/kg) requiring significantly more than group I (0 +/- 0 ml/kg) or group III (39 +/- 27 ml/kg). Lung permeability indexes in groups II (median 0.002, range 0.023) and III (median 0.0035, range 0.053) were not different but were significantly greater than group I (median 0.0007, range 0.001). In the second model, peritonitis was produced by devascularizing the appendix, leaving it in situ for 19 h, and then performing an appendectomy.
Saline
or MAb 60.3 treatment was at appendectomy and every 12 h for 3 days. Survival was significantly greater in the MAb 60.3-treated group at day 10 (90 vs. 40%). Lung permeability was increased at day 2 and was not different between groups. Day 1 fluid requirements were greater in the saline-treated group. These data are consistent with MAb 60.3 protection of systemic but not pulmonary circulation in two models of
sepsis
.
...
PMID:Role of leukocyte CD11/CD18 complex in endotoxic and septic shock in rabbits. 136 2
Listeria monocytogenes
septicemia
in an 80-year-old man is described. On the day before clinical symptoms appeared the patient had eaten homemade salted mushrooms, rufous milkcap (Lactarius rufus Fr.). L. monocytogenes serotype 4b was isolated in blood cultures. The mushrooms which had been stored in cold for 5 months before consumption contained the same listeria serotype at a level of 10(6) CFU/g.
Salt
content (NaCl) of the mushrooms was 7.5%. Fever and diarrhea disappeared with penicillin therapy and the patient was discharged after 4 weeks in the hospital.
...
PMID:Listeria monocytogenes septicemia associated with consumption of salted mushrooms. 275 45
The objective of this study was to assess the use of saline microbubbles as a sonographic contrast medium in monitoring abscess drainage. Seven abscesses were localized and drained with sonographic guidance. Four were in the brain and three were small abscesses in the liver, the subhepatic region, and the pancreas. After aspiration of the purulent material, irrigation with saline produced a highly echogenic sonographic pattern that was free of artifacts and distinctly different from the abscess contents and capsule, and the surrounding parenchyma. In one case, previously unsuspected loculation was detected, requiring repositioning of the needle for complete drainage. All abscesses were resolved and no untoward effects, such as
sepsis
, were encountered. In one additional patient, microbubble sonographic evaluation was used to monitor the progress of an abscess in which a percutaneous catheter was placed.
Saline
microbubbles may be used as a sonographic contrast medium to monitor sonography-assisted abscess drainage.
...
PMID:Saline microbubbles monitoring sonography-assisted abscess drainage. 332 16
The influence of a single peroperative five-liter saline peritoneal lavage has been assessed in 21 consecutive patients undergoing elective operation for colorectal cancer. The aim of the study was to investigate whether reduction in bacterial counts by saline lavage would reduce the incidence of infection and thereby avoid the need for prophylactic antimicrobials.
Saline
lavage was shown to reduce significantly counts in peritoneal fluid of aerobic bacteria from 2 x 10(4) to 5 x 10(1) (P less than 0.001) and to reduce the counts of anaerobes in peritoneal fluid from 8 x 10(4) to 1 x 10(2) (P less than 0.001). Despite the profound reduction in peritoneal bacterial counts the rate of postoperative
sepsis
was extremely high; wound infection 47 per cent, intraabdominal abscess 26 per cent and
septicemia
13 per cent. These results indicate that saline peritoneal lavage alone is no substitute for short-term antimicrobial prophylaxis.
...
PMID:Prophylactic saline peritoneal lavage in elective colorectal operations. 741 76
Controversial studies have been published concerning the role of nitric oxide (NO) release (beneficial or deleterious) during
sepsis
. Severe hypotension has been treated by NO inhibitors in humans, but animal studies described an increased mortality rate with this treatment. We hypothesized that an NO donor might be beneficial in maintaining liver flow during endotoxemia. To answer that question, mean arterial pressure (MAP), aortic, hepatic artery, and portal vein blood flow velocities (AoV, HAV, and PVV) (Doppler technique) were measured after endotoxin injection (Escherichia coli, Salmonella minnesota, and Salmonella enteritidis, 400 micrograms each, intravenously) in anesthetized and mechanically ventilated rabbits. Fifteen animals were treated with saline solution (10 mL/hr) or linsidomine perfusion (2 mg over 3 hours, 10 mL/hr).
Saline
-treated animals experienced a hypodynamic shock with a decrease in MAP, AoV, and PVV. In contrast, HAV increased without fully compensating the PVV decrease. In linsidomine-perfused rabbits, AoV and PVV remained at control level, and HAV increased without any further effect on MAP. Serum lactate levels increased in the saline-treated group and did not change in linsidomine-treated animals. These findings show that at the early phase of an endotoxin shock, and in the absence of intense fluid resuscitation, linsidomine perfusion is beneficial in maintaining systemic and hepatic perfusion while preventing lactic acidosis. These data suggest that, in the early phase of endotoxemia, NO is insufficiently released to allow adequate liver perfusion.
...
PMID:Nitric oxide donor prevents hepatic and systemic perfusion decrease induced by endotoxin in anesthetized rabbits. 759 Jun 74
Muscle protein degradation and intracellular protease activities were investigated in disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC), which is frequently associated with severe catabolic states such as
sepsis
and multiple organ failure. DIC was introduced in rats by repeated intravenous thrombin injections.
Saline
was injected in control rats. In the 28 rats (14 with DIC and 14 controls), the bilateral soleus (SOL) muscles were incubated in an oxygenated medium without cycloheximide (CH) to determine the release of tyrosine (Tyr) into the incubated medium. From 24 rats (12 with DIC and 12 controls), the SOL and extensor digitorum longus (EDL) muscles were harvested to measure the activities of proteasome and of cathepsins L and B. The contralateral muscles were incubated in a medium with 0.5 mM CH to determine the release of Tyr and 3-methylhistidine (3-MH). The release of Tyr without CH (net proteolysis) from SOL muscles with DIC was greater than in controls (218 +/- 83.3 vs. 145 +/- 47.7 pmol/mg/h. However, the release of Tyr and 3-MH with CH (total proteolysis) and the activities of proteasome and cathepsins in DIC were nearly the same as those in controls. In both DIC and control rats, the total release of Tyr and proteasome activity were greater in SOL than in EDL muscles. These results suggest that reutilization of Tyr, reflecting protein synthesis, is suppressed in DIC and that the red slow muscle is more active in nonfibrillar proteolysis than the white fast muscle.
...
PMID:Modulation of muscle protein metabolism in disseminated intravascular coagulation. 764 9
Before the introduction of antibiotics, serious infections caused by Streptococcus pyogenes (Lancefield Group A streptococci) were common. Before World War II, this bacterium was responsible for as many as 50% of postpartum deaths and was the major cause of death in patients with burns. Also common were the sequelae of streptococcal infections-rheumatic fever and post-streptococcal glomerulonephritis. With the use of penicillin, however, Streptococcus pyogenes was believed to be virtually eliminated as a pathogen. The organism was consigned to the history books, but not for long. In the mid-1980s, focal resurgences of rheumatic fever began to be reported from different areas in the USA, such as
Salt
Lake City, Utah. In such communities, where increases in cases of rheumatic fever had been reported, the serotypes M-1, 3, 5, 6 and 18 were isolated which, on culture, produced characteristic mucoid colonies. At the same time, reports of increases in invasive streptococcal disease began to surface in both the USA and Europe. Two syndromes were described; invasive streptococcal infection, occurring in previously healthy children and adults, commonly associated with septicaemia resulting from a deep focus of infection such as bone or lung; and streptococcal toxic shock syndrome, involving a cutaneous focus, accompanied by necrotizing or bullous soft tissue changes.
Septicaemia
is rare in streptococcal toxic shock syndrome, but the most characteristic feature is one of rapidly progressing multi-organ failure. A high proportion of the strains of Streptococcus pyogenes associated with this condition are serotype M-1, and fatality rates approaching 50% have been reported.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Invasive streptococci. 772 68
The role of nitric oxide (NO) inhibition on liver circulation during
sepsis
is unknown. To answer this question, we studied the effects of L-arginine (the substrate for the NO synthase), linsidomine (a direct NO donor), and N omega-nitro-L-arginine (an NO inhibitor) on the liver circulation in anesthetized rabbits previously injected with endotoxin (Escherichia coli, Salmonella enteridis, and Salmonella minnesota, 400 micrograms each). After endotoxin administration, and without fluid resuscitation, rabbits showed a hypodynamic shock with decrease in mean arterial pressure (MAP) and aortic blood flow velocity. Portal vein blood flow velocity decreased, whereas hepatic artery blood flow velocity increased.
Saline
or treatments were injected, 75 min after endotoxin administration. In saline-treated rabbits, MAP, aortic and portal vein blood flow velocities remained steady but hepatic artery blood flow velocity decreased. Only N omega-nitro-L-arginine (7.5 mg/kg, intravenously) significantly increased MAP compared to saline treatment. However, aortic, portal vein, and hepatic artery blood flow velocities were lower in rabbits treated with N omega-nitro-L-arginine than in saline-treated rabbits. L-Arginine (600 mg/kg, intravenously) increased aortic blood flow and portal vein blood flow velocity with no change on hepatic artery blood flow velocity. In contrast, linsidomine (1 mg) increased both hepatic flows. These results show that NO inhibition after endotoxin injection reduces systemic and liver flows, while NO release from linsidomine improves them. These findings question the usefulness of NO inhibition during septic shock, particularly as hepatic failure frequently occurs in the evolution of the disease.
...
PMID:Effect of modifying nitric oxide pathway on liver circulation in a rabbit endotoxin shock model. 774 50
Pressure, moisture, shear forces and friction lead to skin ulcer formation. Nursing home and home-bound patients with restricted mobility, poor nutrition, incontinence and chronic conditions such as anemia, diabetes and dementia are at risk for ulcer formation. Bedridden patients should be turned from side to side at 30-degree angles at least every two hours. Mattress and chair cushions, splints and cradle boots may reduce pressure. Good hygiene and barrier ointments, condom catheters, absorptive products and scheduled toileting for incontinence may control moisture. Calorie and protein supplements, feeding assistance and serial weight measurements are essential in the management of malnourished patients. Treatment should be based on the stage of the ulcer and the presence of conditions such as necrotic debris, infection and drainage.
Saline
wet-to-dry dressings and enzymatic and surgical debridement are necessary to remove necrotic tissue.
Saline
-soaked gauze, hydrogel preparations and occlusive dressings provide the physiologic environment for fibroblasts to grow and form granulation tissue. Patients with
sepsis
may require hospital admission for both further evaluation and systemic antibiotic therapy.
...
PMID:Pressure ulcers in nursing home patients. 846 16
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