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Query: UMLS:C0036690 (
sepsis
)
59,461
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Septicemia
was induced in cats by infusion of live E. coli bacteria into the inferior vena cava, the portal vein or the aortic arch. Systemic arterial blood pressure, aortic blood flow, pulmonary arterial blood pressure, intestinal blood flow and portal venous pressure were recorded continuously and arterial platelet and white blood cell counts and acid-base balance measured at intervals. Infusion of E.coli into the inferior vena cava induced an initial response characterized by systemic pressure reduction, unchanged or increased aortic blood flow and pulmonary hypertension. Intestinal blood flow decreased moderately, while portal pressure remained unchanged. The arterial infusion evoked a similar response. After portal infusion there was a more pronounced increase of aortic blood flow, a significantly less elevation of the pulmonary artery pressure, and the intestinal blood flow was maintained. The changes induced in arterial acid-base balance or in platelet and
white cell
counts were not influenced by the route of administration. It is concluded that the route of administration of bacteria is of importance when considering the relevance of experimental data to clinical septic states.
...
PMID:Pulmonary vascular reactions in experimental septicemia, A preliminary report. 700 84
Six infants with disseminated HSV had no mucocutaneous lesions at any time during the course of the illness. These infants presented with lethargy, poor feeding, apnea, acidosis, and hepatomegaly. The diagnosis of HSV was made by culturing the infant's oropharynx and blood, and the maternal cervix. Eight infants with HSV encephalitis had no skin, eye, or mucous membrane lesions. These infants presented with lethargy and low-grade fever, followed within 24 hours by the onset of focal partial motor seizures. The seizures were refractory to anticonvulsant therapy. The mean CSF
white cell
count was 131 cells/mm3;the glucose and protein concentrations were in the normal range. Brain biopsy was required for the early diagnosis of HSV encephalitis. These 14 cases presented 70% (14/20) of all infants with neonatal HSV diagnosed during the study period. HSV infection should be considered in infants with no mucocutaneous lesions who have signs usually associated with bacterial
sepsis
or who develop focal seizures during the first three weeks of life.
...
PMID:Neonatal herpes simplex infection in the absence of mucocutaneous lesions. 706 32
Anemia is invariably seen in patients who have been severely burned, and a number of factors have been implicated in its etiology. Prior studies have suggested that a depressed rate of erythropoiesis is involved. In order to study this, we evaluated the effect of serum from burned patients on red cell and
white cell
colony growth in vitro. We found that these sera were capable of inhibiting red cell, but not
white cell
, colony growth. Additional experiments indicated that this was related to the presence of some substance in the burned serum rather than the absence of a factor required for colony formation. Further studies, including review of clinical data, suggested that this effect was not due to topical medications nor to episodes of bacterial
sepsis
. Serial studies showed that inhibition was often not present in the immediate postburn period but developed gradually, reaching maximum intensity approximately 20 to 30 days following the burn and then returning toward normal as patients healed their injury. Our studies permit the hypothesis that inhibition of erythropoiesis plays a role in the pathogenesis of the anemia of thermal injury.
...
PMID:The anemia of thermal injury: studies of erythropoiesis in vitro. 712 May 31
Impaired neutrophil responses contribute to the neonate's increased susceptibility to infection. Because granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) and granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) enhance granulocyte and macrophage number and function, their use in the management of neonatal
sepsis
may be beneficial. Little is known about the endogenous levels of G-CSF and GM-CSF. In adults, raised values for G-CSF, but not GM-CSF, have been demonstrated in patients with infection, and conflicting data has emerged regarding CSF levels in neonates. We have used an ELISA to measure maternal and cord serum G-CSF and GM-CSF at the time of delivery, with gestational age between 25 and 42 wk. In mothers, an inverse linear relationship between gestational age and GM-CSF levels (p = 0.049) was found, but no association with G-CSF levels was observed. In neonates, a quadratic association was found between GM-CSF levels and gestational age (p = 0.019), whereas G-CSF levels showed an inverse linear association (p = 0.015). In addition, an association was found between maternal and cord GM-CSF (p = 0.007) but not G-CSF levels in paired samples. The effect of gestational age on the cytokine levels could not be explained by the
white cell
count, the absolute neutrophil count, pregnancy-induced hypertension, or the presence of infection.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Granulocyte and granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factors in cord and maternal serum at delivery. 751 77
Beta 2-microglobulin (beta 2m) determination in CSF of 72 neonates who underwent a spinal tap as part of a
sepsis
or meningo-encephalitis workup was performed to evaluate the usefulness of this test in the diagnosis of CNS infections. Beta 2m was measured by enzyme immunoassay. Sixty neonates had sterile culture and normal neurological status at discharge. Twelve infants had CNS infections: 8 bacterial meningitis, 3 TORCH infections (T = toxoplasmosis, O = others, R = rubella, C = cytomegalovirus and H = herpes simplex) and 1 viral meningitis. Neonates with CNS infection exhibited significantly higher CSF beta 2m levels compared to neonates with sterile culture (6.24 +/- 2.66 vs 1.74 +/- 0.5 mg/l; P < 0.0001). CSF beta 2m levels did not correlate with the
white cell
count, total protein concentration or glucose level in CSF. When serum and CSF levels were measured simultaneously, the CSF beta 2m level was significantly higher than the corresponding serum level in patients with CNS infection (6.98 +/- 2.5 vs 3.2 +/- 0.25 mg/l; P < 0.01). Sensitivity, specificity, and predictive values were estimated for different cut-off points. The best operational diagnostic cut-off value was 2.25 mg/l. Receiver operating characteristic curve analysis showed an appropriate trade-off between specificity and sensitivity and indicated that CSF beta 2m was accurate in distinguishing between neonates with and without CNS infection. Conclusion. CSF beta 2m may be a useful ancillary tool in neonates when CNS infection is suspected.
...
PMID:Cerebrospinal fluid beta 2-microglobulin in neonates with central nervous system infections. 760 83
In septic patients capable of normal
white cell
responses, high plasma levels of PAI-I, t-PA antigen and t-PA-PAI-I complex were observed. The ratios of t-PA and PAI-I were such that free PA activity was almost never observed. In patients severely leucopenic prior to becoming septic the changes were significantly less marked, so presence of leucocytes enhances the fibrinolytic inhibition occurring in
sepsis
. The non-leucopenic septic group showed greater evidence of thrombin generation in that FPA levels were higher but fibrinogen levels were only slightly less and antithrombin levels not different from those in the leucopenic group. A greater tendency to fibrin deposition and the striking fibrinolytic inhibition noted in patients with normal
white cell
responses may contribute to the development of some of the complications of
sepsis
in which fibrin deposition participates and may explain their relative rarity in leucopenic patients. When shock supervened, levels of PAI-I were high in both leucopenic and non-leucopenic groups, indicating that a source of PAI-I outwith the leucocytes themselves contributes to the phenomena observed.
...
PMID:Influence of white blood cells on the fibrinolytic response to sepsis: studies of septic patients with or without severe leucopenia. 764 91
A 55-year-old female presented with sore throat and slight fever. The patient was admitted to our hospital on December 13, 1993. Full blood count showed hemoglobin 10.7 g/dl,
white cell
count 960/microliters (neutrophils 14%, lymphocytes 82%, blasts 2%) and platelets 13,000/microliters. Bone marrow examination showed hypocellularity with 4.5% of myeloblast positive for peroxidase. The bone marrow specimens on Dec. 20 showed 15.5% of myeloblasts, some of which had Auer rods. These findings led to the diagnosis of refractory anemia with excess myeloblast in transformation (RAEB-T) of French-American-British Cooperative Group. The patient was transfused and treated with cytarabine ocfosfate (SP-AC) (100 mg tid) and 6-mercaptopurine (50 mg tid) for 14 days. During chemotherapy she complained of nausea and anorexia, but they were managed easily with medication. On Feb. 7, 1994, forty-two days after the start of administration, peripheral blood and bone marrow aspirate were compatible with a complete remission. Although complete remission was sustained with courses of chemotherapy for 4 months, relapse occurred and the patient died of
septicemia
on August 29, 1994 after induction failure. Observation suggested that oral SPAC in combination with 6-mercaptopurine had a good antileukemic effect on the myelodysplastic syndrome. However, the duration response was short, and further improvement of the therapy is needed.
...
PMID:[Refractory anemia with excess myeloblast in transformation induced remission by combined oral administration of cytarabine ocfosfate and 6-mercaptopurine]. 779 1
Peripheral blood stem cell autografts for the treatment of chronic myeloid leukaemia (CML) are currently under evaluation. A patient with CML received intensive chemotherapy followed by granulocyte colony-stimulating factor prior to the collection of peripheral blood derived stem cells. He developed unusually severe, and fatal, hypophosphataemia and this coincided with the rapid rise of his peripheral blood
white cell
count. The hypophosphataemia was considered to be due to a combination of severe anorexia,
sepsis
and the rapid growth factor-stimulated myeloid regeneration in CML.
...
PMID:Severe hypophosphataemia during stem cell harvesting in chronic myeloid leukaemia. 779 70
The case notes of all children admitted during the preceding five years for observation with painful hips (509 patients) were analysed to determine significant diagnostic factors and thus to design and admission policy. Most orthopaedic disorders (62 patients) were apparent on the initial radiographs, with the important exception of osteomyelitis/septic arthritis (21 patients). The remaining 426 patients were diagnosed by exclusion as having an irritable hip. The latter two groups were similar with respect to age, sex, and duration and nature of symptoms. A number of clinical features and laboratory investigations recorded within 12 hours of admission, however, were shown to have significant discriminative value. These were severe spasm, tenderness, pyrexia > or = 38 degrees C, and an erythrocyte sedimentation rate of > or = 20 mm/hour (the
white cell
count was not significant). Combination of any two of these produced a specificity and sensitivity for
sepsis
of 91% and 95% respectively (95% confidence interval 0.64 to 0.97). A protocol designed from this data analysis is now being tested and is expected to result in a significant reduction in admission rates.
...
PMID:Management of irritable hip: a review of hospital admission policy. 806 94
The growth of two strains of Serratia marcescens in blood components was tested in this study. One of the strains had been implicated in the epidemic of transfusion-associated
sepsis
experienced in Denmark and Sweden in 1991. In whole blood with a final concentration of 100 colony-forming units per mL of S. marcescens, there was an immediate reduction of more than 95 percent of colony-forming units, but no reduction of the bacterial concentration if the blood had been
white cell
-reduced before inoculation. This is interpreted as an effect due to phagocytosis by white cells and as a lack of bactericidal effect of the plasma. A reduction to 10 percent of the original concentration, observed if the blood had a nominal content of white cells, was most likely due to phagocytosis. White cell reduction by filtration after inoculation further reduced the bacterial concentration of one of the strains tested, but, after a 1-week lag phase, growth accelerated to high concentrations by 6 weeks. In platelet-rich plasma prepared from S. marcescens-inoculated units, abundant growth was found after 24 hours, increasing to very high concentrations (10(12) colony-forming units/mL) during 10-day storage at 22 +/- 2 degrees C. Keeping the whole blood at ambient temperature for 20 hours before preparation of platelet-rich plasma caused only temporary reduction of bacterial concentration in the S. marcescens experiments, but resulted in a complete absence of bacteria in the platelet-rich plasma for 10 days in control experiments performed with Staphylococcus epidermidis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Transfusion-associated Serratia marcescens infection: studies of the mechanism of action. 823 20
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