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Query: UMLS:C0036690 (
sepsis
)
59,461
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Case histories, results of synovial fluid analyses, treatment regimens and outcome are described for 15 adult Standardbred horses with confirmed post-injection septic arthritis. Joint
sepsis
followed injection of corticosteroids,
hyaluronic acid
, polysulphated glycosaminoglycan, or local anaesthetic. The median interval from injection to appearance of clinical signs was 2.5 days, and median interval from injection to referral was 9 days. The median initial synovial leucocyte count on admission was 57 x 10(9)/litre, but there was a wide range of values (18-258 x 10(9)/litre). The median synovial neutrophil percentage was 95% (77-99%). All bacterial isolates were Gram-positive cocci, 86% of which were staphylococci. All treated horses (12/15) initially received broad-spectrum parenteral antibiotic therapy, and the articulations of all horses except one were lavaged, either with non-surgical through-and-through techniques only (N = 3), or surgically with arthrotomy (N = 1) or arthroscopy (N = 7). The owners of all treated horses were contacted and racing records were consulted. Eleven of 12 horses returned to racing. Outcome was judged as either satisfactory (3/12) if the horse had returned to racing levels similar to or better than before treatment, or unsatisfactory (9/12) if the horse had poorer performance or could not return to racing. The 3 horses with satisfactory follow-up had been treated with arthroscopy and post-surgical closed suction drainage. The results of bacterial cultures suggest that the initial antimicrobial agents used should be effective against penicillin-resistant staphylococci.
...
PMID:Septic arthritis in 15 standardbred racehorses after intra-articular injection. 145 51
Oxygen free-radicals are known to impair wound healing after ischaemia-reperfusion or polymorphonuclear cell stimulation. Furthermore, they reduce the breaking strength of all recent wounds and might be a cause of wound leakage. This study was performed to evaluate whether or not
hyaluronic acid
can reduce the risk of wound impairment caused by free-radicals, in rats with abdominal
sepsis
, polymorphonuclear cell stimulation or cytochrome C function derangement produced by xenobiotics. Male Sprague-Dawley rats with open wounds received phenazine methosulfate or zimosan, or had abdominal
sepsis
to induce oxygen free-radical generation. There were three groups of treatment:
hyaluronic acid
cream,
hyaluronic acid
ethyl ester gel, and placebo. The reduction in wound size was measured from the 1st to the 11th postoperative day; biopsies were taken for histological evaluation. Every other day, a gentle debridement was performed in all the groups of animals. We found that
hyaluronic acid
and its ethyl ester derivative significantly improved the wound healing of rats subjected to an increased generation of oxygen free-radicals. It remains to be established whether or not
hyaluronic acid
acts as a scavenger of free-radicals.
...
PMID:Hyaluronic acid prevents oxygen free-radical damage to granulation tissue: a study in rats. 196 92
Time-dependent serum concentrations of extracellular matrix proteins were studied in 32 patients with pancreatitis in order to find potential markers of the reparative response during the disease. Patients were subdivided by clinical and biochemical criteria: severe acute pancreatitis (n = 10), moderate acute pancreatitis (n = 17), and acute attack of chronic pancreatitis (n = 5). Serum and plasma samples were collected on days 1-7, 10, 14, and 21 for measurements of the aminoterminal propeptide of type III procollagen (PIIINP),
hyaluronic acid
, laminin, fibronectin, and routine clinical-chemical parameters. During an acute attack of chronic pancreatitis all parameters were within the reference range. In moderate acute pancreatitis concentrations of PIIINP, laminin, and
hyaluronic acid
fluctuated around the upper reference limit, but declined to mid-normal levels at day 21. In severe acute pancreatitis all three parameters increased. In patients who died as a consequence of
sepsis
and multi-organ failure the increase in PIIINP, laminin and
hyaluronic acid
was much more pronounced and paralleled by a decrease in plasma concentrations of fibronectin. In conclusion, this study revealed a relation between the severity of acute pancreatitis and the increase in serum concentrations of extracellular matrix components, especially PIIINP.
...
PMID:Follow-up of the serum levels of extracellular matrix components in acute and chronic pancreatitis. 212 79
Hyaluronan (
hyaluronic acid
) is normally rapidly cleared from the circulation by the endothelial cells in the liver sinuoids, which make up part of the reticulo-endothelial system (RES). An impaired RES function in severe infection and
sepsis
might therefore lead to elevated hyaluronan plasma levels. Thus, plasma concentrations of hyaluronan were analysed in 44 patients with severe infection at onset of disease and twice during the following 2-3 days. The patients were divided with respect to severity of disease; no septic shock (n = 29), group 1), septic shock survivors (n = 7, group 2), and septic shock non-survivors (n = 8, group 3). Patients in group 1 showed significantly higher values of plasma hyaluronan on day 1 (p less than 0.05) compared with controls. There was no significant difference on the following two sampling occasions. Patients with septic shock (groups 2 and 3) showed higher values than both controls (p less than 0.001) and patients with severe infection without septic shock (group 1, p less than 0.001) at all three sampling occasions. Non-survivors of septic shock (group 3) had significantly higher values than survivors (group 2), (p less than 0.01-0.05). Septic shock, and especially fatal septic shock, thus appears to be associated with elevated plasma hyaluronan concentrations. Possible mechanisms might be an increased release of the polysaccharide from the interstitial space to the bloodstream, or a decreased rate of clearance by liver endothelial cells. This question demands further study.
...
PMID:Elevated levels of plasma hyaluronan in septicaemia. 323 17
Burns wound
sepsis
is not only the most common but also the most severe complication following extensive thermal injury. One conceivable explanation of this problem is a reduced capacity of the polymorphonuclear neutrophil leucocytes of these patients to combat the invading microbes. Fifty patients (42 male and 8 female) with deep dermal burns, covering 20-90 per cent of the total body surface area, were investigated from immediately after the injury until death or until healing of the wounds. The following functions of the neutrophil granulocytes were studied: chemotaxis and random migration utilizing a modified Boyden chamber technique, phagocytosis of Staph. aureus and IgG-coated latex particles, bactericidal capacity, e.g. killing of Staph. aureus and the neutrophil granulocyte content of: myeloperoxidase, lactoferrin, and chymotrypsin-like cationic protein. The presence of stimulators and inhibitors of the granulocyte functions was studied using gel filtration of the patient's serum on Sephacryl gel columns. Sera from all patients obtained within the first 1-3 days post-burn contained significantly increased amounts of heat-labile chemokinetic stimulating activity. Sera obtained between days 4 and 10 after injury contained significantly decreased amounts of heat-stable chemokinetic stimulating activity. Reduced chemokinetic activity was found during the third and fourth weeks following major burns (greater than or equal to 40 per cent) due to the presence of one or both heat-stable chemokinetic inhibitory activities. During the second week post-burn patients with burns larger than 40 per cent of the body surface area who showed an inhibition of chemotaxis, also had defects in phagocytosis, and often impaired bactericidal capacity concomitant with lower contents than normal of the granular enzymes. A
hyaluronic acid
preparation in low concentrations was found to counteract the migration inhibitory effect demonstrated in vitro in sera from patients with severe burns. Based upon these results a series of patients with severe burns and impaired functions of the neutrophil granulocytes have been treated with small amounts of this
hyaluronic acid
preparation subcutaneously. Very promising results have been noticed, similar to those found in vitro.
...
PMID:Neutrophil granulocyte functions in severely burned patients. 402 46
Seventy-four cultures of Pasteurella multocida representing all four capsular types, A, B, D, and C, from various animal species and diseases were examined for the production of hyaluronidase by two procedures. In one, hyaluronidase production was determined by the depolymerization of streptococcal capsular
hyaluronic acid
, and in the other, production was determined by degradation of sodium hyaluronidate in a solid culture medium. Hyaluronidase production was only demonstrated in the 13 type B cultures that had been recovered from cases of hemorrhagic
septicemia
.
...
PMID:Hyaluronidase production by type B Pasteurella multocida from cases of hemorrhagic septicemia. 676 66
The hepatic extraction of
hyaluronic acid
(HA) was studied in porcine fecal peritonitis in two groups of animals given various amounts of volume substitution. There was a progressive decrease in hepatic blood flow (QH) and a corresponding increase in the plasma concentration of HA in arterial blood over a 5-hour observation period, less pronounced in animals given more volume substitution. While hepatic clearance of HA decreased, the extraction ratio over the liver was not altered. The extracted amount of HA, which at steady state reflects the turnover of HA, was also unchanged. There was a significant correlation between QH and arterial HA concentration (r = 0.57; p < 0.05). The data suggest that the arterial HA concentration in
sepsis
reflects QH rather than an altered ability of the liver to eliminate HA.
...
PMID:Hepatic extraction of hyaluronic acid in porcine peritonitis. 753 35
Group A streptococci (S. pyogenes) possess a number of capsule and cell wall associated components and release many extracellular proteins (toxins and hydrolytic enzymes) that are known or thought to contribute to the virulence and pathogenicity of the microorganism. Groupe A streptococci cause a wide array of infections, the most frequent of which are acute pharyngitis and pyoderma with two severe sequelae (acute rheumatic fever and glomerulonephritis). Other manifestations are scarlet fever and various soft tissue infections as well as
sepsis
and the recently characterized streptococcal toxic shock syndrome. The somatic components of group A streptococci include cell wall M protein, capsular
hyaluronic acid
, lipoteichoic acid, peptidoglycan, fibronectin binding protein, C5a peptidase and receptors for various human plasma proteins particularly IgA and IgG. The extracellular products are numerous and consist of among others the hemolytic toxins streptolysins S and O, hyaluronidase, streptokinase and cysteinyl proteinase as well as the superantigens erythrogenic toxins A and C also known as pyrogenic exotoxins.
...
PMID:[Cellular constituents and extracellular proteins involved in the pathogenic capacity of Streptococcus group A]. 873 28
Although studies have indicated that hepatocellular function is depressed early after the onset of
sepsis
, it remains unknown whether liver endothelial cell function is also compromised under such conditions. To study this, male rats were subjected to polymicrobial
sepsis
by cecal ligation and puncture (CLP), followed by administration of 3 ml/100 g body wt normal saline subcutaneously to these and to sham-operated animals. Blood samples (0.2-ml aliquots) were taken from the carotid artery, portal vein, and hepatic vein at 2, 5, 10 (i.e., hyperdynamic
sepsis
), or 20 hr (hypodynamic
sepsis
) after CLP, and plasma
hyaluronic acid
(HA) was determined using a Pharmacia assay kit. In addition, HA clearance was assessed at 5, 10, or 20 hr after CLP by injecting 30 micrograms/100 g body wt HA intravenously. Plasma HA was determined at 2-40 min after the administration of HA. The results indicate that plasma levels of HA in blood from three different sites did not increase significantly until 10 hr after CLP. Clearance of HA decreased only at 20 hr after CLP, compared to sham-operated animals. These results suggest that the increased plasma levels of HA at 10 hr after the onset of
sepsis
are solely due to the increased release/production of the polysaccharide. Since circulating HA is cleared exclusively by the liver endothelial cell, the results demonstrate that liver endothelial cell dysfunction (i.e., the increased circulating HA levels and decreased HA clearance) occurs only during the late, hypodynamic stage of polymicrobial
sepsis
.
...
PMID:Liver endothelial cell function is depressed only during hypodynamic sepsis. 912 93
The aim of this study was to monitor hepatic function in patients with pneumonia meeting the
sepsis
criteria of the American College of Chest Physicians/Society of Critical Care Medicine (ACCP/SCCM) and to determine if hepatic dysfunction is related to the systemic inflammatory response. Twenty patients were recruited. The monoethylglycinexylidide (MEGX) test was carried out on days 1-10 after admittance to the intensive care unit. Blood samples for determination of serum concentrations of
hyaluronic acid
, C-reactive protein (CRP), interleukin (IL)-6, IL-8, IL-10 and conventional liver function tests (aspartate aminotransferase, alanine aminotransferase, bilirubin, albumin) were also drawn. Patients were classified into two groups according to illness severity estimated by the simplified acute physiology score (SAPS II) on the day of admission. Patients in group I (n=10) had a SAPS II probability of mortality >3% while those in group II (n=10) had a SAPS II < 3%. The MEGX level over the first five days was significantly lower in group I than in group II (p<0.0001). Significant inverse correlations during the first 5 days were observed between the MEGX 30 min test results and IL-6, CRP and SAPS II and more modest correlations with
hyaluronic acid
(p=0.0025) and IL-10 (p=0.021). The conventional liver function tests did not differ between the two groups and were mostly within the respective reference ranges. We conclude that the MEGX test is a sensitive marker of liver dysfunction early in
sepsis
and that low MEGX values are associated with an enhanced inflammatory response.
...
PMID:The monoethylglycinexylidide (MEGX) test as a marker of hepatic dysfunction in septic patients with pneumonia. 1115 41
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