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

To determine the role of antibiotic prophylaxis for stab wounds of the chest requiring intercostal tube drainage, a double-blind study was conducted comparing cefazolin, given to 57 patients at 500 mg every 8 h for 24 h, with placebo, given to 56. Differences were detected in the rate of thoracotomy for sepsis (antibiotic nil versus placebo 9 per cent, P < 0.05) and in the frequency of sputa positive for pathogens (12 versus 34 per cent respectively, P < 0.05), but the incidence of pyrexia, raised white cell count, positive cultures from pleural drainage or intercostal catheter tips and volume of chest drainage was similar. The mean hospital stay and costs consequent on morbidity were greater in patients receiving placebo, supporting the conclusion that antibiotic prophylaxis is indicated.
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PMID:Antibiotic prophylaxis is indicated for chest stab wounds requiring closed tube thoracostomy. 849 11

Platelet concentrates stored with and without autologous white cells were produced from units of whole blood that had been purposefully contaminated with bacteria immediately after phlebotomy. The blood was inoculated with one of five species of bacterium at either 10 or 50 colony-forming units per mL. The growth of the organisms was quantified throughout the conventional 5-day, 22 degrees C storage period of the platelet concentrates. One species, Klebsiella pneumoniae, failed to grow in any of the components. The remaining species, Staphylococcus epidermidis, S. aureus, Enterococcus faecalis, and Salmonella enteritidis, achieved log growth after 1 day of storage and reached a relative maximum concentration by Day 3. Although the concentration of bacteria immediately after inoculation was lower in the units reduced in white cells by filtration, no significant differences were observed thereafter. Data from this in vitro study support the concept that prestorage white cell reduction of platelet concentrates should not increase the likelihood of transfusion-induced septicemia.
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PMID:Effect of prestorage white cell reduction on bacterial growth in platelet concentrates. 851 96

The clinical records of 45 patients with suspected intra-abdominal sepsis but without localizing abdominal signs were retrospectively reviewed. All had undergone both indium-111 leucocyte scintigraphy and real time ultrasound. Twenty-two of the 45 patients were subsequently shown to have intra-abdominal abscesses. Twenty-one patients were identified correctly by indium-111 scintigraphy (sensitivity 95%) and 10 by ultrasound (US: sensitivity 45%). There were two false positive scintiscans (specificity 91%) but no false positive US scans (specificity 100%). There was no correlation between the peripheral white cell count and the presence of absence of an abscess or the likelihood of obtaining a positive scintiscan result. Because of the excellent specificity ultrasound scanning should remain the initial investigations in this group of critically ill patients with indium-111 scintigraphy being used to clarify the US findings or in US negative patients.
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PMID:Indium-111 leucocyte scintigraphy and ultrasound scanning in the detection of intra-abdominal abscesses in patients without localizing signs. 858 40

The efficacy of the prophylactic use of intravenous immunoglobulin (Ig) was evaluated in a double-blind placebo-controlled trial of 21 pairs of ventilated neonates weighing more than 1,500 g. Each infant received 0.4 g/kg/day of intravenous Ig or a similar volume of placebo daily for 5 days. Criteria used to assess the efficacy of intravenous Ig were the number of infections, the duration of ventilation therapy and time to clinical recovery. There were no significant differences in the treated and placebo groups with regard to the frequency of positive blood cultures (28.6% and 14.3%), endotracheal cultures (57.1% and 66.7%) and abnormal white cell counts (52.4% and 57.1%). On entry to the study there was no significant difference in IgG levels between the treated (974.5 mg/dl; SD 575.3) and placebo groups (818 mg/dl; SD 516.9). However, on day 6 the treated group had a mean level of 1,400.3 mg/dl (SD 426.7) versus 710.9 mg/dl (SD 377.4) in the placebo group (P < 0.05). Clinical improvement occurred within 3 days in both groups. Ventilatory support was required for 11.8 days (SD 8.3) in the treated and 11.8 days (SD 7.3) in the placebo group. Both groups required 3-4 antibiotic treatments over a period of 14-15 days. Two patients died in the treated and 4 in the placebo group, with 1 infant in each group developing bronchopulmonary dysplasia. The patients who recovered did so within 14 days. Analyses of subgroups of patients with different diagnoses revealed no differences except a trend suggesting fewer infections in term babies treated with intravenous Ig. The organisms cultured in the intravenous Ig groups were Pseudomonas, Klebsiella, Escherichia coli and Staphylococcus and in the placebo group Pseudomonas, Klebsiella and Enterobacter. The above has shown that, except for a trend in the older neonates, intravenous Ig is not of prophylactic benefit in ventilated neonates. Newer adjuncts in immunotherapy such as hyperimmune gammaglobulin or monoclonal antibodies may prove of greater value in the treatment of neonatal sepsis.
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PMID:Intravenous immunoglobulin prophylaxis in neonates on artificial ventilation. 871 53

The use of quantitative bacteriology in the burns unit has been thought to be efficient in predicting sepsis or graft loss. To examine the relationship between clinical outcome and bacterial densities on and in the burn wound, 69 biopsy/surface swab pairs were collected from 47 patients on 64 occasions, either immediately prior to excision and grafting, or at routine change of dressings. The mean per cent TBSA burn was 16 (range 1-65). There was a significant correlation between log total bacterial count by biopsy with total white cell count and age (P = 0.028), and a significant negative correlation between total bacterial count by swab with per cent TBSA (P = 0.006). There was no significant difference in bacterial counts between patients judged to be a clinical success or clinical failure (72 h follow-up), either after undergoing excision and grafting, or change of dressings, and no difference in counts between patients with perioperative bacteraemia and those without. With burns > 15 per cent TBSA, a relationship between bacterial counts and subsequent sepsis or graft loss still was not demonstrated. It is suggested that quantitative bacteriology by burn wound biopsy or surface swab does not aid the prediction of sepsis or graft loss.
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PMID:Quantitative microbiology in the management of burn patients. II. Relationship between bacterial counts obtained by burn wound biopsy culture and surface alginate swab culture, with clinical outcome following burn surgery and change of dressings. 872 53

Nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC) has been shown to be highly responsive to chemotherapy. The major limiting toxicity was myelotoxicity. Recently, the role of granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) in reducing chemotherapy-induced neutropenic sepsis has been well established. In this study, we tested whether recombinant human G-CSF (rhG-CSF) could effectively support the bone marrow function in both previously untreated and pretreated metastatic NPC patients receiving intensive chemotherapy. Twelve patients with distant metastatic disease, 5 newly diagnosed (group A) and 7 pretreated patients (group B), were enrolled to receive BEC (bleomycin, epirubicin and cisplatin), followed by rhG-CSF support (50 microg/m2 s.c. daily for 10 days) every 4 weeks for two cycles. Four patients in group A completed the treatment as scheduled while only 2 patients in group B did. After the first treatment cycle, 6 patients (50%) had grade III-IV myelosuppression. Five of the patients were from group B. The mean values of the white cell count nadir were 2,680 (range 1,200-3,700) in group A and 1,343 (range 400-2,900) in group B (p = 0.0386). Neutropenia-associated fever occurred in 7 patients, 6 of whom had received previous treatment. There were 2 deaths due to toxicity, and both patients had liver metastases within 6 months following radiation. After 24 months of follow-up, only 1 patient is still alive. Our preliminary results suggest that in previously treated metastatic NPC patients, bone marrow suppression is still the major limiting toxic side effect of aggressive chemotherapy, especially for those patients with liver recurrences within 6 months after irradiation and despite rhG-CSF support.
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PMID:Intensive chemotherapy plus recombinant human granulocyte-colony stimulating factor support for distant metastatic nasopharyngeal carcinoma. A preliminary report. 897 90

A protocol for management of young febrile children at risk for bacteraemia has been used at Westmead Hospital, a university based hospital in the western Sydney region, since early 1994. Implementation of the protocol was retrospectively evaluated for the 12 month period 1 June 1994 to 31 May 1995, using the emergency department log book as the primary data source. Altogether 498 children, aged from 3 months to 3 years, with a fever > or = 39.5 degrees C were identified over this period, of whom 291 were admitted to hospital because of evidence of sepsis or identified focal infection and 207 children without focal infection were observed in the short stay annexe of the emergency department. Fifty children, considered at high risk of bacteraemia because of a total white cell count > or = 20 x 10(9)/1 received empiric antibiotic treatment with ceftriaxone, of whom 19 subsequently had proved bacteraemia and another 10 had focal infection identified during observation in the short stay annexe. Bacteraemia was due to Streptococcus pneumoniae in 16 cases and Haemophilus influenzae type b in three. No adverse events occurred at follow up. Use of a management protocol and selection on higher white cell count criterion than previously recommended by US centres resulted in restriction of empiric antibiotic treatment to a small proportion of young febrile children presenting to a busy emergency department of whom 38% were bacteraemic.
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PMID:Evaluation of a protocol for selective empiric treatment of fever without localising signs. 906 2

There is increasing evidence that nitric oxide (NO) is an important factor in the pathogenesis of septic shock. It is known that polymorphonuclear neutrophils (PMNs) are activated during sepsis or after surgical stress, and they then release various toxic mediators including free radicals. It has not been clear whether NO synthesis can be induced in circulating PMNs. Blood samples were obtained from 11 patients with sepsis, 23 patients with systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS), and 16 patients without SIRS (nonSIRS) who underwent operation. We examined mRNA expression of inducible NO synthase (iNOS) in circulating PMNs from those patients pre- and postoperatively using the reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) method and measured their serum nitrate (NO2-) + nitrate (NO3-) concentration, peripheral blood white cell (WBC) count, and serum C-reactive protein (CRP) level. The frequency of iNOS expression in PMNs increased in sepsis (100%) and SIRS (70%) patients compared to that in nonSIRS patients (18%) (p < 0.001). The peripheral WBC count and CRP level were significantly higher in iNOS-positive patients than in iNOS-negative patients (p < 0.05 and p < 0.01, respectively). Postoperatively, the serum NO2- + NO3- concentration increased in 87% of septic patients and in 56% of patients with SIRS (p < 0.05 for both). Our study indicated that iNOS mRNA expression is induced in human circulating PMNs of patients with postoperative sepsis and SIRS and may be involved in the pathogenesis of the sepsis syndrome.
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PMID:Expression of inducible nitric oxide synthase in circulating neutrophils of the systemic inflammatory response syndrome and septic patients. 967 45

A 49-year-old black man with hypertension-induced chronic renal failure requiring hemodialysis and a history of arteriovenous access graft infection was admitted with Staphylococcus aureus sepsis, dyspnea, and peri-incisional erythema over his arteriovenous graft fistula. Results of a transthoracic echo demonstrated aortic sclerosis and concentric left ventricular hypertrophy. Results of a whole-body In-111 white cell (WBC) scan were negative over the arteriovenous graft site; however, an intense abnormal focus of labeled WBCs was evident to the left of the sternum. A subsequent transesophageal echocardiogram showed a mixed cystic-solid calcified mass adjacent the left aortic cusp. Surgery confirmed a perivalvular abscess. As a whole-body imaging modality, the In-111 WBC scintigram indicated the true location of the infectious process responsible for the patient's sepsis. The combination of echocardiography and radiolabeled WBC imaging increases sensitivity for detection of endocarditis/perivalvular abscess. Radiolabeled WBC imaging is more efficacious for monitoring therapy because the echocardiogram often does not change with treatment of endocarditis/perivalvular abscess.
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PMID:Perivalvular abscess complicating infective endocarditis: complementary role of echocardiography and indium-111-labeled leukocytes. 973 77

Between 1988 and 1995, 341 children with acute myeloid leukaemia (AML) were treated on the Medical Research Council Acute Myeloid Leukaemia Trial (MRC AML10). The 5-year overall survival was 57%, much improved on previous trials. However, there were 47 deaths (13. 8%), 11 of which were associated with bone marrow transplantation (BMT). The treatment-related mortality was significant at 13.8%, but decreased in the latter half of the trial from 17.8% in 1998-91 to 9. 6% in 1992-95 (P = 0.03%). The main causes of death were infection (65.9%), haemorrhage (19.1%) and cardiac failure (19.1%). Fungal infection was a significant problem, causing 23% of all infective deaths. Haemorrhage occurred early in treatment, in children with initial white cell counts >100 x 109/l (P = 0.001), and was more common in those with M4 and M5 morphology. Cardiac failure only occurred from the third course of chemotherapy onwards, with 78% (7/9) in conjunction with sepsis as a terminal event. Some deaths could be prevented by identifying those most at risk, and with prompt recognition and aggressive management of complications of treatment. Future options include the prophylactic use of antifungal agents, and the use of cardioprotectants or alternatives to conventional anthracyclines to decrease cardiac toxicity.
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PMID:Treatment-related deaths during induction and first remission of acute myeloid leukaemia in children treated on the Tenth Medical Research Council acute myeloid leukaemia trial (MRC AML10). The MCR Childhood Leukaemia Working Party. 1046 Jun 4


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