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Query: UMLS:C0036690 (sepsis)
59,461 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Parenteral nutrition via central venous catheterization is associated with serious risks, especially that of sepsis. Lipid emulsion (Intralipid[Sweden]), which may be administered peripherally, was evaluated for its potential to support microbial growth. Washed cultures of Staphylococcus aureus, Candida albicans, and three species of Gram-negative rods were all capable of multiplying in the emulsion at room temperature. Variations in inoculum size did not affect the growth rate. Studies comparing the emulsion to amino acid-glucose solutions (total parenteral nutrition [TPN])confirmed other reports that TPN inhibits the growth of certain bacteria but merely retards fungal multiplication. When human serum was added to the lipid emulsion in an attempt to simulate in vivo conditions at the catheter tip, Escherichia coli was inhibited while the growth of S aureus and C albicians was unaltered.
Arch Surg 1975 Dec
PMID:Microbiol growth in lipid emulsions used in parenteral nutrition. 0 Sep 82

Laminar air flow isolation and decontamination procedures were evaluated in a prospective randomized study in patients with aplastic anemia or acute leukemia undergoing marrow transplantation from HLA-matched siblings. Patients transplanted in the laminar air flow group had significantly less septicemia and major local infections than did patients in the control group. Nineteen of 46 laminar air flow patients and six of 44 control patients are alive at present. In patients with aplastic anemia the survival was 13 of 17 in the laminar air flow group compared with four of 17 in the control group. In patients with acute leukemia the survival was six of 29 in the laminar air flow group versus two of 27 in the control group. These differences were not statistically significant. Death in both the laminar air flow and control groups was predominantly due to interstitial pneumonitis or recurrent leukemia, which were unaffected by isolation and decontamination.
Ann Intern Med 1978 Dec
PMID:Protective environment for marrow transplant recipients: a prospective study. 3 Nov 23

Antibiotic sensitivities of 15302 organisms of common pathogenic species isolated in one hospital pathology department in 1971 and 1974 have been studied. Resistance to cephaloridine did not change materially. The proportion of strains resistant to ampicillin did, however, increase, and this is attributed to the widespread therapeutic use of the antibiotic. Cephaloridine, on the other hand, was largely used in the hospital as a single-dose, intra-incisional prophylactic against surgical wound sepsis.
Lancet 1975 Dec 20
PMID:Changing patterns of bacterial resistance in relation to prophylactic use of cephaloridine and therapeutic use of ampicillin. 5 36

The factors important in host defense against group B streptococci are not well understood. The role of antibody and complement in the prevention of serious infection by these organisms is not known because, to date, a reliable measure of functional opsonic activity has not been developed. Recently, it has been shown that neutrophils produce a chemiluminescence after ingestion of particulate matter, and that this event can be detected and quantitated in a liquid scintillation system. We have adapted the chemiluminescence procedure to examine rabbit hyperimmune and human serum for the presence of group B streptococcal opsonins. Group B streptococci of types Ia, II, and III that were opsonized in homologous but not heterologous type serum produced a peak in chemiluminescence when added to normal human neutrophils. Such activity was correlated, in each instance, with ingestion of bacteria by neutrophils and deposition of immunoglobulin and C3 on the bacterial surface as detected by indirect immunofluorescence. With this assay, we have examined sera from colonized and diseased patients for the presence of opsonins to types Ia, II, and III group B streptococci. Maternal sera often contained type-specific opsonins which resided in the IgG fraction and which crossed the placenta to appear in paired cord specimens. 63% of patients colonized with group B streptococci had serum opsonins to their colonizing type of organism. In contrast, none of the 15 patients with sepsis or meningitis had opsonins directed against their infecting strain. These data suggest that the lack of type-specific opsonins to group B streptococci may be one of the important factors in determining host susceptibility to systemic infection with strains of this group.
J Clin Invest 1976 Dec
PMID:Assessment of group B streptococcal opsonins in human and rabbit serum by neutrophil chemiluminescence. 6 61

Eight patients with diuretic-resistant ascites due to cirrhosis were treated by reinfusion of concentrated ascitic fluid. In 11 procedures, with a mean duration of 21.9 hours, weight loss averaged 14.8 kg. Complications during reinfusion included septicemia in 1 procedure, left-sided heart failure in 5, pyrexia in 7 and coagulation abnormalities in 10. Ascites recurred within 2 months after reinfusion in all but one patient. Although this technique is an efficient and inexpensive method of treatment of ascites, it does not appear indicated in patients with cirrhosis and resistant ascites in view of the possibly serious complications associated with reinfusion and the poor long-term results.
Can Med Assoc J 1977 Dec 03
PMID:Treatment of resistant ascites by continuous ultrafiltration--reinfusion of ascitic fluid. 7 94

Medical records were reviewed for 95 consecutive patients hospitalized with a diagnosis of staghorn calculus disease. Of those patients in whom a conservative, non-operative approach was taken 30 per cent ultimately died of renal failure and/or sepsis. It is concluded that surgical intervention is the treatment of choice for patients with staghorn calculus disease.
J Urol 1977 Dec
PMID:Retrospective study of 95 patients with staghorn calculus disease. 7 31

Thirty-four patients with advanced squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck have been treated with sequential combination chemotherapy consisting of Cytoxan, methotrexate, oncovin, bleomycin and adriamycin, followed by Leucovorin (COMBAL). All patients had undergone extensive prior radiation and/or surgery. All the patients had recurrent cancer. Toxicity included two deaths from drug induced pancytophenia and one from sepsis. Treatment was well tolerated and could be given in the outpatient clinic. No bleomycin pulmonary or adriamycin cardiac toxicity was seen. Results include 4 patients who achieved complete remission, objective improvement in measurable lesions in 6 others, stabilization of disease for 1 to 3 mo. in 5, and progression of disease in 13. Survival has ranged from 1 to 19+ months with a median of 10.7 mo. for patients that were evaluated. We conclude that COMBAL produces objective evidence of improvement in approximately 45% of patients with far advanced, previously treated squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck.
Laryngoscope 1979 Dec
PMID:Sequential combination chemotherapy for advanced squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck. 9 40

A 10-year analysis of 113 cases of staphylococcal endocarditis seen in two Washington, D.C., hospitals is presented. 96% of the cases occurred in parenteral drug addicts, but 4% complicated septicemia from known foci of infection. Coagulase positive staphylococcus was responsible for 97% of the infection, and the rest were caused by coagulase negative staphyloccus. Except in four patients with previously known cardiac murmurs, infection occurred on normal valves in these patients. Infection was isolated to the tricuspid valve in 71%, to the mitral valve in 6% and to the aortic valve in 3.5% of our cases; and more than one cardiac valve was affected in the remaining patients. All patients were treated with antibiotics based on bacterial sensitivity testing. The mortality from isolated tricuspid endocarditis was 5%, from isolated mitral endocarditis 33%, and from isolated aortic valve endocarditis 100%. The overall mortality was 18%. The better prognosis documented for acute tricuspid endocarditis is related to the much less severe haemodynamic consequences of acute tricuspid regurgitation, and the probably milder consequences of septic pulmonary embolism compared with coronary or cerebral embolism.
Afr J Med Med Sci 1977 Dec
PMID:Staphylococcal endocarditis: clinical observations on 113 patients. 9 45

Recent modifications and refinements in the management of patients with renal allografts have diminished the mortality rate at our hospital to 2 per cent and 5 per cent at one year for patients receiving kidneys from related and cadaveric sources, respectively. Of 186 receiving transplants since 1974, seven (4 per cent) have died within one year of operation. The incidence of wound infections has been reduced from approximately 25 per cent in 1972 to 2 per cent since 1976 by the use of a single high dose of broad-spectrum antibiotics administered at the time of induction of anesthesia for any surgical procedure. Risk and limitations of immunosuppression have been better appreciated, ultrasound is used more often in the diagnosis of partial obstruction or perinephric fluid collections, and needle biopsy of the transplanted kidney has reduced the morbidity inherent in open biopsy. The contribution of sepsis as a cause of death has declined. The diminishing hazard of renal transplantation has made it an increasingly attractive treatment for end-stage kidney disease.
N Engl J Med 1978 Dec 14
PMID:Factors contributing to the declining mortality rate in renal transplantation. 10 45

The removal of 720 impacted mandibular third molars in the presence of acute pericoronitis, employing as atraumatic an operative technique as possible, did not give rise to serious complications, such as osteomyelitis, brain abscess, septicemia or facial space abscess. The results have been compared with a control group of 1,000 impacted mandibular third molars extracted without presence of acute infection.
Int J Oral Surg 1978 Dec
PMID:Extractions of impacted mandibular wisdom teeth in the presence of acute infection. 10 53


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