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

Over a six year period, 145 pneumococcal septicemias were seen at the Tourcoing Hospital. This represents 0.39% of all hospitalized patients and 19.8% of all septicemias seen over the same period. A mortality rate of 38.6% was recorded. Prognostic factors were analyzed. The mortality rate was significantly higher in women (46.5%), in patients admitted for a reason unrelated to the septicemia (50.8%), and in patients with septic shock (81.5%) which was frequent (22.8%). An underlying poor general condition was present in 88.2% of the patients. This confirms the high risk of pneumococcal infections in some patients who should be protected by vaccination.
Sem Hop 1982 Feb 04
PMID:[Pneumococcal septicemia: 145 cases (author's transl)]. 627 12

Experience with 28 patients with acute diffuse complicated colitis operated on in emergency or semi emergency by the same surgical team is reviewed. The forms with colonic dilatation are the most numerous but do not resume the serious complications which may occur in the course of non specific inflammatory diseases of the colon. The operative mortality in this series was 10,7% (3/28). Peritoneal sepsis was the most significant factor contributing to mortality. It appears that the keystone to successful management is to prevent colonic perforation. Protracted medical management may be at last partly responsible for this complication. Failure of intensive medical therapy to induce rapid improvement constitutes an indication for definitive surgical treatment.
Sem Hop 1982 Apr 15
PMID:[Surgical treatment of acute complicated colitis. Report on twenty-eight cases (author's transl)]. 628 5

491 cases of non typhoidal salmonella infections were studied in the Rouen Hospital University Centre. Affected patients are mainly children who usually present mild febrile gastroenteritis. Severe forms with septicemia, enteric fever, or focal manifestations, usually occur in adults. In nearly half the cases an underlying disease or another predisposing condition was found. In these cases, the mortality rate was increased. Antibiotic therapy prolonged post-convalescent excretion of salmonellae. Adequate diet and hygiene are sufficient in mild forms. Antibiotics should be used only in acute salmonella infections.
Sem Hop 1982 Apr 15
PMID:[Non typhoidal Salmonella infections: a clinical study of 491 cases (author's transl)]. 628 7

The authors report a case of septicemia due to Leptotrichia buccalis in a patient with underlying lymphatic leukemia. It is the second case reported in the literature. This observation shows, once again, that bacteria known as "non virulent" can exhibit pathogenicity in immunosuppressed patients.
Sem Hop 1982 Sep 02
PMID:[Septicemia due to Leptotrichia buccalis in an immuno-suppressed patient]. 629 Nov 60

Seventeen recent cases of spontaneous renal septicemia with acute renal failure are reviewed, confirming the need for a diagnostic and therapeutic strategy to restore the fluid balance, if necessary with the aid of an artificial kidney, and the urgency of treating local infection and the pathogenic agents involved. The case review also suggest that the high mortality rate of this infection, estimated by some observers at 50 p. cent, can be greatly reduced by early radical urological treatment.
Sem Hop 1982 Sep 30
PMID:[Acute renal insufficiency in spontaneous septicemia of renal origin. Analysis of a series of 17 patients]. 629 84

Trochanteric bedsores are a serious condition because of the danger of osteoarthritis of the coxofemoral joint, which is a source of septicemia, and also because of the difficulty of covering them with skin owing to the mobility of the bone and the absence of skin laxity in the area. The authors suggest a new technique of closure after local preparation providing a clean "surgical" defect. They use a groin island flap raised in the Japanese "retrograde" manner (i.e. laterally to medially). This technique is of course the fruit of the authors' experience of the microsurgery. The distal portion of the flap is drawn, corresponding to the size of the defect (round shape). The proximal portion contains the vessels surrounded by subcutaneous and protected by a de-epithelialized triangle of skin with a distal base. The flap is passed through a subcutaneous tunnel between the femoral trigone and the trochanteric area to be covered. The donor site is closed by approximation of the edges after they have been undermined. The authors discuss the others possible surgical managements: 1) local flaps (transposition flap, Z plasties, are unsuitable; 2) the double S-rotation flap had the drawback of creating a large undermined area and leaving a scar on the trochanteric region; 3) simple GER-type muscle flaps are not advisable because the transposed muscle always indergoes a fibrous involution so that the graft provides insufficient protection; 4) myocutaneous flaps, and especially fascia lata myocutaneous flap, offer better indication, because of muscle only acts as a vascular pedicle for the skin flap. The only drawback is the relative defect resulting from raising the flap. The authors conclude that the groin island flap offers the following advantages; a skin material which is more than efficient; ideal vascularization; perfect corverage without undue tension of the trochanteric surface; an interesting training for the plastic surgeon performing microsurgical reconstruction.
Sem Hop 1982 Oct 07
PMID:[Inguinal island flap for covering trochanteric bedsores]. 629 39

Septicemia due to the anaerobic gram-negative bacillus Fusobacterium necrophorum is exceptional. It may originate in tonsillitis or intestinal or gynecological infection. We report one case in a young man with head injury. Fusobacterium necrophorum is frequently associated with aerobic pathogens such as streptococcus or staphylococcus (more than fifty per cent of the cases). Metastatic localizations are numerous, often pleuro-pulmonary (infarction, abscess), hepatic (cytolysis) and meningeal (purulent meningitis, cerebral abscess), and in some instances articular (joint swelling) or embolic. Hypercoagulability is often associated. Prognosis is severe (45% mortality rate). Penicillin G seems to be the best antibiotic but erythromycin is effective, as well as imidazole which was very active in our case.
Sem Hop 1982 Dec 30
PMID:[Septicemia due to Fusobacterium necrophorum. A case report]. 630 52

Schistosoma haematobium eggs may occasionally be found in the renal parenchyma, usually with no pathological consequences, the main risk to the kidney being obstruction of the urinary tract by bilharzial lesions. Egg deposits in the submucosa and muscles of the excretory tract induce obstruction and sclerosis, mainly in the ureters. Bilateral stenosing bilharzial ureteritis results in mechanical obstruction of the renal function, sometimes, unfortunately, accentuated by sepsis and pyelonephritis. This condition is a strong indication for surgical repair of the stenotic lesions of the urinary tract, which must be performed before the onset of irreversible damage to the renal function.
Sem Hop 1983 Sep 15
PMID:[Chronic renal insufficiency in urogenital bilharziasis]. 631 18

It is well-known that cirrhosis is a predisposing factor to Yersinia septicemia. This study includes 73 cirrhotics and shows a high number of positive serologic tests (47/73 : 64.4%). However, there is no correlation with clinical features or bacteriological findings. The most frequent serotypes, i.e. pseudotuberculosis IV and enterocolitica 0:9, differ from those which are usually found in Yersinia septicemias. Iron overload in cirrhosis, increased intestinal load of gram-negative bacilli and possible latent bacteremia may partly explain these results. However, the role probably played by as yet poorly known cross-reactions between Yersinia and other pathogens (Shigella, E. Coli...) must be underscored. The authors conclude that slightly positive, stable, serodiagnostic tests have little meaning in cirrhotics.
Sem Hop 1983 Oct 06
PMID:[Serodiagnosis of Yersinia infections in cirrhotic patients. Study apropos of 73 patients]. 631 24

Among 31 patients with positive blood cultures for gram-negative bacilli seen in a department of internal medicine, 13 had at least 3 positive blood cultures from samples taken over more than 12 hours and were diagnosed as having septicemia (group I) ; 18 patients had less than three positive blood cultures over the same period or had several positive blood cultures over a shorter period and were diagnosed as having bacteremia (group II). There were no significant differences between these two groups concerning age, sex, fever, other clinical features, or biological findings. E. coli was recovered in 70 % of cases and was almost always related to urinary infection. 8 patients died (3 in group I, 5 in group II), 6 of whom had cirrhosis. The sensitivity of the pathogens to the main antibiotics is described. The most often used antibiotic combination was ampicillin-gentamycin. It is suggested that in departments receiving patients from outside the hospital rather than from intensive care units the ampicillin-gentamycin combination can be advocated as the first treatment. As there were no significant differences between patients with septicemia or bacteremia, in severe infections a single positive blood culture should be taken into account and discrimination between septicemia and bacteremia is useless.
Sem Hop 1983 Oct 06
PMID:[Gram-negative septicemia and bacteremia in an internal medicine department]. 631 29


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