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Query: UMLS:C0036690 (
sepsis
)
59,461
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Proline metabolism was prospectively evaluated in patients with surgical
sepsis
, cirrhosis, and elective surgical procedures. Significant correlations were found in the septic patients. Proline levels were an excellent indicator of mortality and correlated positively with lactate levels. Lactate and proline were inversely related to total peripheral resistance and
oxygen
consumption. In septic patients who expired: the metabolites involved in the hepatic pathways of proline degradation were elevated in proportion to proline; lactate, glutamate and proline were directly related to pyruvate; lactate/pyruvate ratios were constant; proline, glutamate, ammonia, ornithine, lactate and pyruvate levels were inversely proportional to
oxygen
consumption and total peripheral resistance. The primary defects in
sepsis
seem to be metabolic; there are very strong correlations in time between physiology and metabolism; the metabolic abnormality seems to be a progressive energy-fuel deficit, possibly from a progressive inhibition of substrate entry into the Krebs cycle.
...
PMID:Proline metabolism in sepsis, cirrhosis and general surgery. The peripheral energy deficit. 11 5
The bactericidal and metabolic function of the phagocytic system requires integration of several complex humoral and cellular factors responding to different regulators. Polymorphonuclear leukocytes are highly mobile cells, capable of phagocytosis of bacteria or fungi with formation of a "cellular digestive system" containing reactive
oxygen
radicals, hydrogen ions, and digestive enzymes. The unique metabolism of
oxygen
in neutrophils results in release of energy as light (chemiluminescence) a response closely associated with microbiol killing. Neonatal neutrophils cope with normal bacterial challenges in vitro as efficiently as adult neutrophils; however, these cells have decreased capacity for locomotion, decreased deformability, decreased phagocytosis in low serum concentrations, and decreased chemiluminescence. These subtle defects in function can be amplified by exaggerated challenge which may be related to a higher incidence of
sepsis
during the neonatal period.
...
PMID:Bactericidal and metabolic function of polymorphonuclear leukocytes. 22 38
Preoperative and serial postoperative clinical, cardiovascular, physiologic, and metabolic studies were carried out on 86 patients undergoing coronary artery bypass surgery (CABG); and 48 patients undergoing abdominal general surgical procedures (GSEL). Multivariable statistical analysis of these data showed the patients to be in different physiologic states and to manifest several types of recovery trajectories that could not be discerned on clinical grounds alone. The CABG patients followed one of three types of cardiogenic recovery trajectories. In contrast, GSEL patients show a normal recovery trajectory different from all CABG types. When
sepsis
develops, and exaggerated stress response (A state) occurs, with increased
oxygen
consumption and a pattern of amino acids, fat, and glucose breakdown products, which is heightened but similar to the response of nonseptic GSEL patients. With progression of
sepsis
severity, an unbalanced hyperdynamic recovery trajectory (B state) develops in which a decrease in
oxygen
consumption is associated with increases in the aromatic amino acids tyrosine, tryptophane, and phenylalanine; and decreases in the branched-chain amino acids, leucine and isoleucine. Triglycerides rise as keto acids fall, but both lactate and pyruvate rise. Glucagon is persistently high, regardless of insulin levels. The quantifiably different physiologic recovery trajectories reflect altered hormone and metabolic states and imply different responses to therapy.
...
PMID:The physiologic recovery trajectory as the organizing principle for the quantification of hormonometabolic adaptation to surgical stress and severe sepsis. 31 78
The commonly accepted sequence of low blood flow, tissue hypoxia, lacticacidosis and death does not apply to all patients dying from shock. The hyperdynamic circulation characteristic of severe
sepsis
is not likely due to peripheral arteriovenous shunts, since in skeletal muscle at least, capillary blood flow is increased and varies directly with cardiac index. A hyperdynamic circulatory state is seen in many patients with
sepsis
and may be related to metabolic changes rather than changes in
oxygen
transport. Skeletal muscle capillary blood flow is increased in fasting normal subjects and septic postoperative patients, both of whom are catabolic. Therefore, elevated blood flow, which is characteristic of severe
sepsis
, may be a response to or necessary for the catabolism of body protein required for energy production. Profound metabolic abnormalities resulting in rapid catabolism may be responsible for the demise of the septic patient. If this concept of
sepsis
is accepted, it follows that treatment which heretofore has been aimed at increasing blood flow and blood pressure should be redirected to therapy which provides energy substrates and alters hormonal patterns to favor anabolism.
...
PMID:Cardiovascular and metabolic changes in shock and sepsis. Review fo changing concepts. 32 66
Immunofluorescence was performed on lung tissue obtained at necropsy from 18 newborn infants, including five with group B streptococcal (GBS)
sepsis
, seven with idiopathic respiratory distress syndrome (IRDS), and six control infants who died from other causes. Deposits of C3, IgG, and fibrin were found within hyaline membranes of infants who died with GBS
sepsis
or IRDS within 48 hours after birth. In some cases C4, factor B, and IgM were also observed. In five infants with IRDS who died more than five days after birth, immunofluorescent lung findings were less common and less intense. Hyaline membranes, attributed to mechanical ventilators and
oxygen
therapy in two infants who did not have GBS infection or IRDS, were negative for complement and immunoglobulins although fibrin was detected in one specimen. These data suggest that immunologic processes may contribute to the pathogenesis of certain types of acute lung injury, particularly in infants who die from GBS infection or IRDS during the early neonatal period.
...
PMID:Immunofluorescence in group B streptococcal infection and idiopathic respiratory distress syndrome. 37 79
The hemodynamic response to a dopamine HCl infusion (10 microgram/kg per min) was measured in 25 adult patients with severe
sepsis
: there were 6 patients with circulatory hyperdynamic states, 9 patients with myocardial failure, and 10 with hypovolemia. Each patient also had acute respiratory failure. Changes of intrapulmonary shunt fraction (Qs/Qt), arterial and mixed venous
oxygen
tension (PaO2 and PvO2),
oxygen
transport, and
oxygen
consumption (VO2) were evaluated before and after dopamine infusion. Dopamine infusion produced clinical improvement and increased cardiac output. The hemodynamic response seemed to differ slightly according to the pattern of circulatory failure: chronotropic effect appeared to be predominant in hyperdynamic states, whereas inotropic effect appeared to be predominant in myocardial failure or hypovolemia. Moreover, in hypovolemic patients we noted a rise in pulmonary capillary wedge pressure suggesting an additional increase in venous return. During this treatment, we also noted a worsening of the Qs/Qt despite the increase in pulmonary blood flow; this worsening did not prevent significant improvements in VO2, but the improvement in PVO2 was offset by increased Qs/Qt and PaO2 remained unchanged.
...
PMID:Effect of dopamine on intrapulmonary shunt fraction and oxygen transport in severe sepsis with circulatory and respiratory failure. 44 60
Complications are the major causes of illness and death after burning and most of them stem from the burn wound. Their origin and importance are reviewed with emphasis on problems and growing points in knowledge. Fluid leakage from the circulation into the burn is the cause of hypovolemic shock, but the underlying permeability changes in the burn are only partly understood. Other nonbacterial complications include acute cardiac failure, acute anemia, hemolytic jaundice, renal failure, encephalopathy, complex hypermetabolic effects including pseudodiabetes, gastric and duodenal ulceration, deep vein thrombosis and pulmonary embolism, pulmonary and glomerular microthrombosis, hepatic jaundice, and arterial thrombosis. Involvement of the airway in conflagrations carries special hazards like glottic edema and inhalation of irritant fumes. Nowadays, bacterial causes are dominant and these remain the main challenge. Bacterial infection and invasion of the burn are usually responsible for
septicemia
, bronchopneumonia, and pyelonephritis although other sources also contribute. Indirect manifestations of
septicemia
include paralytic ileus, acute gastric dilatation, toxic myocarditis, and some cases of renal failure. Therapeutic complications like agranulocytosis, thrombocytopenia, and colitis occur at times. High concentrations of
oxygen
given therapeutically can produce fatal aseptic hypoxic pneumonitis.
...
PMID:A review of the complications of burns, their origin and importance for illness and death. 44 73
Two cases of infants with shock are presented. Cardiac output was determined in both with dilution dye using an auricular oxymeter, with three determinations: at 0, 30 and 60 minutes while receiving intranvenous fluids. At the same time, blood gases and blood lactatewere determined. The first case showed hypodynamic shock secondary to hypovolemia due to severe dehydration, associated to low central venous pressure, low arterial tension, increased peripheral resistance and increased arteriovenous difference of
oxygen
. The second case was a newborn with
sepsis
and disseminated intravascular coagulation with hyperdynamic shock with very high cardiac output, low peripheral resistance and low arteriovenous difference of
oxygen
. Both cases had an initial increase of lactate and a mild decrease at the end of the period of clinical observation.
...
PMID:[Hemodynamometabolic changes in shock in infants. Report of 2 cases]. 62 52
To examine the relative roles of passive factors (flow; filling pressures of left side of heart) and active factors (acidosis; arterial unsaturation) in the genesis of pulmonary hypertension when associated with
sepsis
, 37 patients with
sepsis
and 24 patients without
sepsis
were examined. Pulmonary hypertension was measured by the pulmonary arterial diastolic-pulmonary wedge pressure gradient (PAd-PWP gradient) and correlated reasonably with a standard formula for calculated resistance ([PA--PWP]/CI, where PA is mean pulmonary artery pressure and CI is cardiac index). In 22 of 37 patients,
sepsis
was associated with a significant degree of resistance to flow in the pulmonary circulation, as measured by the PAd-PWP gradient: and the higher the PAd--PWP gradient, the greater the likelihood of early death. None of the examined passive or active factors appeared to be adequate to explain pulmonary hypertension when present. By the use of previously derived formulae to estimate the compliance of the elastic pulmonary arteries, factors affecting this part of the pulmonary microcirculation could not be held accountable for apparent pulmonary hypertension. Therefore, the presence of pulmonary hypertension in sepis appears to be an active, rather than a passive, phenomenon and unrelated to arterial
oxygen
saturation or acid-base imbalance. Although the exact cause is unknown, pulmonary hypertension in sepis is associated with a high mortality and may be clinically followed by measurement of the PAd-PWP gradient.
...
PMID:Pulmonary hypertension in sepsis: measurement by the pulmonary arterial diastolic-pulmonary wedge pressure gradient and the influence of passive and active factors. 64 8
Fifteen patients (range of ages, 18 to 35 years) who survived an acute episole of the adult respiratory distress syndrome caused by mechanical or thermal injuries,
sepsis
, and shock were studied during 1 to 30 months after recovery. The patients had had no previous pulmonary diseases, and only two had been smokers. All of the patients were asymptomatic, and their chest x-ray films were normal on follow-up examination. Tests of pulmonary function revealed mild abnormalities which consisted of reduction of pulmonary volumes, decreased carbon monoxide diffusing capacity, and a mild increase of alveolar-arterial
oxygen
pressure gradients in the early stage ofter recovery. Improvement was noted after a few months, but eight patients still had mild reduction of pulmonary volume after one to two years. No correlation could be established between the severity of the adult respiratory distress syndrome, therapy with mechanically assisted ventilation, the duration of exposure to supplemental
oxygen
, the fractional concentration of
oxygen
in the inspired gas, and the degree of residual functional defect.
...
PMID:Pulmonary function following the adult respiratory distress syndrome. 68 80
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