Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0036690 (sepsis)
59,461 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

This review will begin by giving the highlights of the history and explain development of the basic science knowledge of hemoglobin chemistry, function, and physiology. The necessary involvement of red cell metabolism, as it pertains to the maintenance of 2,3-diphosphoglycerate (2,3-DPG) levels, both normally and under the perturbed and experimental conditions of blood storage, will be given as part of the basic science data. The clinical science and transfusion data will comprise the main critical aspects of the paper. Analysis and comment of over 20 studies will be given on the effects of animal and human transfusions with altered 2,3-DPG levels. Decreased survival and organ function have been demonstrated with transfusion of low 2,3-DPG red cells, with or without anemia, in the conditions of exercise, shock, hypotension, ischemia, cardiac surgery, hypoxia, sepsis, and acidosis. By critical analysis of these studies, recommendations on general and specific patient needs for red cell transfusions with normal or high 2,3-DPG levels are given.
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PMID:The significance of 2,3-DPG in red blood cell transfusions. 4 84

In our intensive care unit we were able to prevent almost all bleedings from stress ulcerations in patients with insufficiency of various organs by administering the H2-receptor blocker, cimetidine, in doses of 200 mg eight times per day. However, stres ulcer bleedings occurred in 14% of those patients also suffering from a sepsis. At lower doses of cimetidine, the rate of bleeding was comparable to that encountered in patients treated with antacids, i.e. 12.5% patients with multiple organ insufficiency and 42.7% with sepsis. Cimetidine did not show any therapeutic effect in case of bleeding which led to a significant fall in hemoglobin concentration.
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PMID:[Prevention and therapy of gastroduodenal stress hemorrhage in intensive care patients using the histamine H2-receptor antagonist cimetidine]. 37 88

We conclude that DIC can occur as a result of sickle cell crisis in the absence of sepsis and we recommend that patients with sickle cell disease, particularly those with hemoglobin SC disease, presenting in crisis should be considered at risk for the development of disseminated intravascular coagulation. With symptomatic treatment and improvement of the crisis, our patient's coagulopathy resolved.
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PMID:Disseminated intravascular coagulation in sickle cell crisis. 43

The diagnosis of acute sepsis after musculoskeletal surgery is based on the results of the clinical examination. Microbiologic evaluation of clinical specimens permits identification of the causal organism(s) and of the susceptibility studies. In the subacute stage of postoperative sepsis, roentgenographic examination, a peripheral leukocyte count, erythrocyte sedimentation rate, hemoglobin level, and nuclear scans can be helpful to the clinician. Frozen section histologic examination of tissues and Gram staining of fluids obtained at surgery have resolved the choice in differential diagnosis between aseptic and septic loosening of painful prosthetic components. Laboratory evaluation, including tissue biopsy, identifies the chronic complications of amyloidosis and malignant change in patients with long term sepsis of the musculoskeletal system.
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PMID:Laboratory diagnosis of postoperative sepsis of the musculoskeletal system. 45 Apr 11

Gonococci do not readily cause disseminated infection in mice. To simulate some of the conditions leading to disseminated gonococcal infection in women, we suspended gonococci in mucin plus hemoglobin and studied the development of gonococcal bacteremia. The mucin-hemoglobin mixture was used because the menstruum appears to be involved in dissemination of gonococci from the genital tract during menstruation. Mice did not die after massive inocula of 10(9) gonococci given intraperitoneally in broth, but when gonococci were suspended in mucin (15%) alone, the 50% lethal dose was 10(8.4) and in 15% mucin plus 4% hemoglobin (M/H), the 50% lethal dose fell to 10(6.6). Sublethal doses produced local peritonitis and transient bacteremia. With larger inocula the local peritoneal infection progressed to fatal septicemia. Studies of the mechanism by which M/H lowered the 50% lethal dose showed that systemic clearance mechanisms were compromised, but not enough to account for the total decrease in the 50% lethal dose. If gonococci were given intravenously after intraperitoneal inoculation of M/H, sequestration of gonococci in the peritoneal cavity occurred, suggesting an effect on local peritoneal defenses. The effect on neutrophils appeared most significant, since numbers of neutrophils in the peritoneal fluid were decreased in the presence of M/H and neutrophils were destroyed by M/H in vitro. The serum bactericidal system was not affected. We conclude that M/H promotes gonococcal bacteremia by interference with phagocytosis and intracellular killing of gonococci. The model simulates the disseminated gonococcal infection cases in women which follow pelvic inflammatory disease in its progression from local peritonitis to transient or lethal bacteremia and in factors (mucin and hemoglobin) which enhance infection.
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PMID:Disseminated gonococcal infection in mice. 52 60

Certain foreign materials have been demonstrated to enhance the infectivity of aerobic and anaerobic bacteria. Whole blood and other protein compounds encountered in surgical settings or trauma were tested for their effect on infectivity of nonsporeforming anaerobic bacteria. Infectious synergistic mixtures of Bacteroides fragilis plus Peptostreptococcus anaerobius and Bacteroides melaninogenicus plus Fusobacterium necrophorum were each diluted to a barely noninfectious or minimally infectious concentration (subinfective inoculum) that was injected intraperitoneally into mice alone and in combination with test proteins. Infectivity was measured by deaths from sepsis or abscess(es) within the abdominal cavity at autopsy at 1 week. Two hemostatic agents, Gelfoam powder and Avitene (final concentrations, 10 mg/ml), and crystalline hemoglobin (4 g/100 ml) each produced a marked increase (P < 0.001) in the rate of infection when mixed with a normally subinfective inoculum of either bacterial mixture. Fresh homologous mouse blood (0.25 ml) injected intraperitoneally without anticoagulant also significantly enhanced infectivity (P < 0.01) of a subinfective inoculum of B. fragilis plus P. anaerobius. These studies demonstrated the capacity of whole blood, hemoglobin, and hemostatic agents to enhance the infectivity of certain nonsporeforming anaerobic bacteria. The high concentrations of anaerobic bacteria in the gastrointestinal, female genital, and respiratory tracts produce an increased risk of human infection after surgery or trauma in these sites; the protein agents studied here may further enhance infection.
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PMID:Enhancement of experimental anaerobic infections by blood, hemoglobin, and hemostatic agents. 63 83

In two patients with extensive marrow necrosis, the diagnosis of marrow necrosis was established by morphologic and radioisotopic studies, and the extent of involvement was accurately assessed by marrow scanning with technetium Tc 99m sulfur colloid while the patients were still alive. The literature on marrow necrosis was briefly reviewed and the clinical features of this condition were characterized. It was found that patients with this condition often have malignancies, underlying marrow disorders, sepsis, bone pain, and pancytopenia. Their marrow is often difficult to aspirate and they may require frequent transfusions to maintain a stable hemoglobin level. Radioisotopic studies are useful in the diagnosis and assessment of extent of involvement of this condition. They should be used in patients with clinical findings suggestive of marrow necrosis.
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PMID:Bone marrow necrosis. Diagnosis and assessment of extent of involvement by radioisotope studies. 87 25

Twelve infants with sickle cell anemia identified in the course of a cord blood screening program have been followed prospectively for up to three years of age. The development of hemolytic anemia paralleled the postnatal decline in fetal hemoglobin and was evident in all infants by 12 weeks of age. Vasoocclusive episodes occurred in more than half the infants and seven aplastic crises were documented in four patients. Febrile illnesses were common and one of the twelve infants developed pneumococcal sepsis. This study also demonstrated that functional asplenia is an acquired defect in sickle cell disease. The onset of functional asplenia was documented with splenic scans in six of the nine infants followed for more than one year after birth. There have been no deaths in this series.
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PMID:Prospective study of sickle cell anemia in infancy. 94 13

The Zurich A. H. is a pneumatic drive biventricular cardiac prosthesis with tubular silicone rubber membrane, tilting discvalves, and fluid control system. Membrane position is monitored throughout the cardiac cycle to prevent systolic membrane collapse or insufficient diastolic filling. This A. H. was implanted in 25 dogs weighing 23-50 kg. In five animals, the A. H. performed satisfactorily for more than 24 hr. At an average flow rate of 60-90 ml/min per kg, the aortic pressure ranged from 80 to 100 mm Hg, and both left and right atrial pressures were within normal range. The animals were awake, and they breathed spontaneously after 24 hr; average plasma hemoglobin levels averaged 91 mg/100 ml, and platelet counts decreased to 65,000 cu mm. In three animals subjected to the A. H. pump for 24 hr, the A. H. was removed and replaced with a transplant. Adequate transplant function was obtained, but there were no long-term survivors. Adequate hemostasis, sepsis, and complex organ dysfunctions associated with prolonged pumping are currently the main biologic problems.
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PMID:Evaluation of a fluid-controlled artificial heart. 125 28

The spectra of resonance Raman scattering of blood in norm and under pathology (myocardial infarction and sepsis), as well after artificial hemotransfusion or UV photomodification have been studied. It has been shown that under heart pathology the structure of hemoglobin porphyrin macrocycle of erythrocytes changes, the size of porphyrin "nucleus" increases. The opposite conditions are observed at blood sepsis. It has been found that the traditional methods in tissue restoration, hemotransfusion and UV photomodification of blood don't result in complete restoration of hemoporphyrin molecule.
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PMID:[The mechanisms of the porphyrin conformation of normal blood hemoglobin and in pathology]. 130 20


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