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)

The flow of phenylalanine, the essential amino acid precursor of thyroid hormone and catecholamines, was severely elevated in five septic burned patients (6.70 +/- 1.07 mg/kg) and six nonseptic burned patients (5.00 +/- 0.44 mg/kg) when compared with seven normal controls (2.10 +/- 0.33 mg/kg). Fasting serum concentrations of phenylalanine were elevated in the septic burned patients (2.33 +/- 0.37 mg/100 ml of serum) relative to the nonseptic patients (1.28 +/- 0.21 mg/100 ml) and the controls (1.01 +/- 0.15 mg/100 ml). The rate of appearance of the phenylalanine metabolite, tyrosine, after an oral phenylalanine dose was normal in all burn patients. Increased serum concentrations and increased flow of phenylalanine are an index of rapid protein catabolism, further augmented by sepsis in the thermally injured, and not a reflection of decreased hepatic conversion of phenylalanine to tyrosine.
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PMID:Abnormalities of phenylalanine and tyrosine kinetics. Significance in septic and nonseptic burned patients. 62 74

Low levels of thyroid hormone in the absence of clinical hypothyroidism often happen to patients with critical non-thyroidal illnesses (NTI). Low thyroid hormone concentrations in serum do not necessarily mean hypofunction of the thyroid gland; rather it is a helpful adaptation of the human body to the underlying diseases. We collected 133 hospitalized cases of critical NTI and analyzed the incidence of this phenomenon. Fifty-three per cent of the patients had T3 level lower than 60 ng/dl (normal:85-165 ng/dl) and 60% had T4 level lower than 6 ug/dl (normal:6-12 ug/dl). The lowest levels were observed in patients who had sepsis, were aged over 70 or died in this admission. Free T4 and TSH levels were within normal range in most cases. There is a strong negative correlation between the prognosis and the level of T4 in these patients. Those patients with markedly low levels of T3 and T4 should be treated more sophisticatedly.
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PMID:Abnormal thyroid hormone levels in critical nonthyroidal illness. 164 73

Five days after thyroidectomy (Tx) or sham-Tx in young male Sprague-Dawley rats, sepsis was induced by cecal ligation and puncture (CLP). Control animals underwent laparotomy and manipulation of the cecum without ligation or puncture. Sixteen hours after CLP or laparotomy, protein synthesis and degradation were measured in incubated extensor digitorum longus (EDL) and soleus (SOL) muscles by determining rate of 14C-phenylalanine incorporation into protein and tyrosine release into incubation medium, respectively. Triiodothyronine (T3) was measured in serum and muscle tissue. Protein synthesis was reduced by 39% and 22% in EDL and SOL, respectively, 16 hours after CLP in sham-Tx rats. The response to sepsis of protein synthesis was abolished in Tx rats. Protein breakdown was increased by 113% and 68% in EDL and SOL, respectively, 16 hours after CLP in sham-Tx animals. The increase in muscle proteolysis during sepsis was blunted in hypothyroid animals and was 42% and 49% in EDL and SOL, respectively. T3 in serum was reduced by sepsis, both in Tx and sham-Tx rats. T3 in muscle, however, was maintained or increased during sepsis. Abolished or blunted response of muscle protein turnover after CLP in hypothyroid animals may reflect a role of thyroid hormones in altered muscle protein metabolism during sepsis. Reduced serum levels of T3, but maintained or increased muscle concentrations of the hormone, suggests that increased T3 uptake by muscle may be one mechanism of low T3 syndrome in sepsis, further supporting the concept of a role for thyroid hormone in metabolic alterations in muscle during sepsis.
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PMID:Studies on the possible role of thyroid hormone in altered muscle protein turnover during sepsis. 360 30

To evaluate the role of thyroid hormones in sepsis, 250-400 g rats were surgically thyroidectomized and 2-6 weeks later sepsis was produced by cecal ligation and puncture (CLP). In normal rats, total body O2 consumption (VO2) increased by 12.8% (P less than 0.05) in early sepsis (6 hr after CLP) and decreased slightly in late sepsis (16 hr after CLP). In hypothyroid (HT) rats, VO2 was depressed by 19.8% (P less than 0.05) in early sepsis and further decreased to 46.7% (P less than 0.001) of preoperative levels in late sepsis. Hepatic blood flow increased in early sepsis in normal rats but was unchanged in HT rats. The normal hyperglycemic response to early sepsis was also absent in HT rats. The respiratory control ratio (RCR) of isolated mitochondria with succinate was not increased in HT rats in early sepsis. In late sepsis, hypothyroid animals showed further decreases in VO2 and mitochondrial RCR, and, in contrast to normal rats, showed no change in blood glucose levels. Survival (5 days) following late sepsis in normal, HT, and HT rats given daily ip injections of thyroxine (30 micrograms/kg) were 65.2% (15/23), 30% (6/20) (P less than 0.025), and 77.1% (14/18), respectively. Thus, absence of thyroid hormone abolishes the hyperdynamic phase of sepsis and significantly increases mortality in sepsis, and thyroxine replacement following thyroidectomy prevents the increased mortality from sepsis.
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PMID:Hypothyroidism abolishes the hyperdynamic phase and increases susceptibility to sepsis. 670 Feb 15

Depressed triiodothyronine and elevated reverse triiodothyronine levels are commonly seen in patients with acute and chronic illness and in patients receiving markedly hypocaloric diets. To investigate the role of nutritional adequacy in causing the altered thyroid hormone levels found in severe illness, we studied patients with bacterial sepsis who were receiving a variety of nutritional regimens. Thirteen patients received only 5% dextrose in water (600-1000 kcal/day), 7 of whom were in shock. Seven patients received total parenteral nutrition (2500-3500 kcal/day). Analysis of thyroid hormone levels in these groups and in controls shows that a large component of the alteration in thyroid hormone levels found in patients with severe illness is due to the caloric deprivation associated with such severe illness.
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PMID:Altered thyroid hormone levels in bacterial sepsis: the role of nutritional adequacy. 742 84

At the clinics of Uludag University Medical Faculty's Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology in Bursa, Turkey, clinicians compared data on 24 premature infants whose mothers had received oral ambroxol (1300 mg/day until delivery) with data on 58 premature infants whose mothers did not receive ambroxol to determine whether or not ambroxol reduced infant respiratory distress syndrome (RDS) by promoting fetal lung maturation. RDS occurred in 8% of the infants in the ambroxol group compared to 10% in the control group. The only RDS case to survive had received ambroxol. Sepsis was more common in the control group than the ambroxol group (13% vs. 4%). None of the infants had any concomitant disorder that would have contributed to fetal lung maturation. Ambroxol did not significantly change maternal liver and renal function results. In infant and maternal cases, the blood thyroid hormone levels were within the normal range. None of the mothers in either group developed a puerperal infection. Ambroxol did not cause any significant maternal or infant side effects. These findings suggest that ambroxol may prevent RDS and sepsis. Larger study groups and studies of groups with hypertension, diabetes, and multiple gestations are needed to determine whether ambroxol is a valuable alternative to steroids for prevention of RDS.
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PMID:Antenatal ambroxol usage in the prevention of infant respiratory distress syndrome. Beneficial and adverse effects. 755 58

In this paper the authors have evaluated the incidence and the clinical implications of sick euthyroid syndrome (SES) in a group of 144 patients in a department of internal medicine. SES is an alteration of thyroid hormone values in the absence of a thyroid disease, which is seen in patients suffering from serious diseases. Having classified SES into 3 subgroups according to the different alterations seen in the values of T3, T4, FT3, FT4, TSH, rT3 and TBG, they show the hypotheses that explain the biochemical mechanisms which are at the basis of these hormonal alterations. Fourteen of the 144 patients under observation were excluded as they were suffering from ascertained or subclinical thyroid disease. Thirty (23% of cases) of the remaining 130 patients had alterations of the thyroid hormones in accordance with SES diagnosis. Of these 30 patients, 19 had hormone values found in SES type I (63%), 2 in SES type II (6.5%) and 9 in SES type III (30.5%). In SES type I the diseases seen, in order of frequency, were: obstructive chronic bronchopneumopathy with acute respiratory failure, diabetic ketoacidosis, neoplasms, ischemic heart disease, cardiac failure, chronic renal failure, liver diseases, acute cerebral vasculopathies, sepsis and collagenopathies. The disease seen in the 2 cases of SES type II was obstructive chronic bronchopneumopathy with acute respiratory failure. In SES type III the diseases seen were, in order of frequency: diabetic ketoacidosis, lung diseases, ischemic heart disease, cardiac failure, peripheral arteriopathies, acute cerebral vasculopathies, neoplasms, liver diseases, acute renal failure. The incidence of SES in 23% of the admitted to hospital patients was found to be slightly higher than in other studies; this could be explained by a stricter selection of inpatients: in fact self-sufficient patients or those not needing urgent admission, were sent to an efficient out patient clinic where necessary examinations were quickly carried out, hospitalization being reserved for patients with more serious illnesses. We would like to underline how the incidence of SES is much greater than that of what is known as thyroid disease (23% compared to 5%), thereby confirming that it is the most frequent cause of alterations of thyroid hormones. With regard to the pathogenetical hypotheses, it is confirmed that in SES, the reduction of T3 values is accompanied by an increase in the values of rT3 as for reduced activity of 5-desiodinasis enzyme. In SES type III the increase of T4 values is due to the increase of TBG resulting in an increase in the link for T4 and therefore a reduced peripheral hormone activity.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:[The euthyroid sick syndrome. Its incidence and clinical significance in an internal medicine department]. 802 42

A 71-year-old patient with high-grade non-Hodgkin's lymphoma stage IVB, severe lactic acidosis and tumor-associated hypoglycemia is described. Endocrine causes of hypoglycemic episodes were excluded because of low serum concentrations of insulin and "insulin-like growth factor 1", and normal concentrations of growth hormone and thyroid hormone. Clinical conditions associated with lactic acidosis such as diabetes mellitus, biguanide intoxication, septicemia, acute hypoxemia, or circulatory insufficiency were ruled out. Enhanced glucose metabolism within the tumor was visualized by positron emission tomography employing 2-fluro-2-deoxy-D-glucose (FDG) as a tracer. A markedly elevated tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) level was found which decreased after cytoreductive therapy paralleling the normalization of serum lactate. In contrast to the majority of cases of lymphoma-associated lactic acidoses reviewed to date, in our case lactate elimination was not reduced.
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PMID:Lactic acidosis and hypoglycemia in a patient with high-grade non-Hodgkin's lymphoma and elevated circulating TNF-alpha. 859 16

T4-binding globulin (TBG), the principal thyroid hormone-binding protein of serum, is a member of the serine protease inhibitor (serpin) superfamily. We report a characteristic serpin cleavage product of TBG in sepsis sera. At 49-50 kDa, the TBG remnant is 4-5 kDa smaller than the intact protein and is the same molecular mass as a TBG cleavage product produced by incubation with polymorphonuclear elastase. Incubation with polymorphonuclear leukocytes also produces the 49- to 50-kDa remnant, and this proteolysis is stimulated by zymosan activation. Polymorphonuclear cell cleavage of TBG increases the ratio of free/bound T4. As previously described, in vitro cleavage of TBG by elastase also increases free/bound T4. These findings are consistent with the hypothesis that serine proteases present at inflammatory sites cleave TBG, releasing its hormonal ligands.
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PMID:A characteristic serpin cleavage product of thyroxine-binding globulin appears in sepsis sera. 1109 20

There is currently a vast literature available on the changes in thyroid function tests that occur during non-thyroidal illness. The aetiology of these changes is, however, controversial, especially with respect to whether they play an adaptive role for the organism in order to cope with stress or whether they represent primary pathology of the pituitary-thyroid axis. This is particularly true for critically ill patients, in whom the most significant changes in thyroid function are observed. The changes include low levels of thyroxine and very low levels of tri-iodothyronine, which would, on the surface, appear to indicate hypothyroidism. Therapy with thyroid hormone, as either L-T4 or L-T3, has therefore been suggested because of these low values for thyroid hormones in the blood. It is, however, unclear whether treating these patients with thyroid hormone is beneficial or harmful. Multiple studies have addressed this issue with patients with cardiac disease, sepsis, pulmonary disease (e.g. acute respiratory distress syndrome) or severe infection, or with burn and trauma patients. In spite of a very large number of published studies, it is very difficult to form clear recommendations for treatment with thyroid hormone in the intensive care unit. Instead, we find the evidence far from compelling, and would advise withholding thyroid hormone therapy in the critical care setting in the absence of clear clinical or laboratory evidence for hypothyroidism.
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PMID:The controversy of the treatment of critically ill patients with thyroid hormone. 1180 May 18


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