Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0036690 (
sepsis
)
59,461
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Plasma
fibronectin
levels were determined in 34 children admitted with severe infectious purpura.
Fibronectin
concentration was decreased in severe infectious purpura as in other
sepsis
, but there was no significant difference between shock and nonshock patients.
Fibronectin
levels were lower in children with ecchymotic or necrotic purpura on admission than in those with petechial purpura; they were lower in those who developed cutaneous sequelae, but it is not known if correction of
fibronectin
deficiency may limit the extent of purpura and prevent the cutaneous sequelae.
...
PMID:Plasma fibronectin in severe infectious purpura of children. 378 Feb 49
Plasma
fibronectin
deficiency and reticuloendothelial phagocytic dysfunction are observed in critically ill and septic surgical, trauma or burn patients with multiple organ failure. They also appear to amplify altered lung vascular permeability with
sepsis
or intravascular coagulation. This article highlights important aspects of plasma
fibronectin
which may relate to the aetiology of multiple organ failure in the septic injured patient.
...
PMID:Plasma fibronectin. 379 Aug 62
Plasma
fibronectin
(FN) is one of the major blood opsonins. The content of the glycoprotein reduces in
sepsis
which in turn may aggravate the course of the infection. FN is detectable in the content of cryoglobulins and cryofibrinogen. The formation of the heparin precipitate following plasma incubation in the cold in the presence of heparin is determined by FN involvement. Fibrinogen (FG) is another main component of the heparin precipitate. To determine the functional activity of plasma FN in
sepsis
and other pathological conditions, a study was made of the ability of FN and FG to go into the precipitate formed in blood plasma in the cold after its incubation with heparin. Unlike normal subjects in whom over 80% of FN on the average and about 20% of FG went into the heparin precipitate, in patients with hemoblastoses and aplastic anemia complicated by
sepsis
, less than 40% of FN on the average and about 7% of FG went into the precipitate. In some patients with
sepsis
, the heparin precipitate did not form. The reduction of FN ability to go into the heparin precipitate correlated with the gravity of the patients' condition. In uncomplicated hemoblastoses, cryoglobulinemia and cryofibrinogenemia and in immunocomplex pathology, the consumption of FN and FG during heparin precipitate formation did not significantly differ from the control. The data indicate that
sepsis
patients with blood system pathology may develop not only quantitative FN deficiency in the blood but also disorder of the functional activity of the opsonin.
...
PMID:[Decreased effectiveness of cold-induced heparin precipitation of plasma fibronectin in infection]. 379 36
Low levels of plasma
fibronectin
(PFN), an adhesive glycoprotein postulated to augment reticuloendothelial function, can predispose animals to a poor clinical outcome following
sepsis
. In the present study, the PFN levels of adult male rats were measured prior to injection of intraperitoneal Escherichia coli and/or stroma-free hemoglobin (SFH) and subsequently at 4, 24, and 48 hours. Intraperitoneal E coli alone elicited insignificant PFN level depression at four hours, with significantly elevated levels only in the high-dose group at 24 (P less than .05) and 48 hours (P less than .01). Intraperitoneal SFH alone did not alter PFN levels from baseline values; when combined with E coli significant four-hour level depression is noted (P less than .05). Elevation of PFN levels by 24 hours occurs in a dose-dependent fashion, returning to baseline values 48 hours postinoculation. Significant mortality was observed only with high doses of E coli combined with SFH. The PFN levels are elevated 24 to 48 hours following high-dose E coli injection. Stroma-free hemoglobin alone has no effect, but when combined with E coli results in PFN level depression four hours postinoculation, contributing to impairment of systemic host defenses and possibly predisposing to greater mortality.
...
PMID:Plasma fibronectin response to Escherichia coli and hemoglobin. 388 48
Acute and chronic malnutrition is associated with increased morbidity and mortality in surgical patients. Plasma
fibronectin
levels have been shown to correlate with reticuloendothelial function and are reduced in burns, shock, trauma, and
sepsis
. Patients failing to show an increase in
fibronectin
levels after stress have been shown to do poorly. Starvation studies in human volunteers have demonstrated decreasing plasma
fibronectin
levels until feeding was resumed. The purpose of this study is to examine the usefulness of
fibronectin
as an assessment parameter in nutritionally depleted hospitalized patients. Eight patients initiated on parenteral nutrition were studied. Plasma
fibronectin
, albumin, and transferrin levels were drawn before TPN and repeated at various intervals after total parenteral nutrition (TPN) was begun. Mean pre-TPN transferrin was 198.1 +/- 16.1 gm/dl (nl 220-400). Transferrin levels remained statistically unchanged after 8 to 11 days of TPN. Mean pre-TPN albumin was 3.0 +/- 0.2 gm/dl (nl 3.6-4.8) and also remained statistically unchanged after 8 to 11 days of TPN. The mean
fibronectin
level pre-TPN was 236.4 +/- 24.4 microgram/ml (nl 370-410).
Fibronectin
rose statistically (P less than 0.005) after 1 to 4 days of TPN to a mean of 341.9 +/- 30.1 microgram/ml and remained elevated and statistically unchanged after 8 to 11 days of TPN. Six of the eight patients studied survived and had demonstrated at least a 30 per cent increase in
fibronectin
after 1 to 4 days of TPN. Both patients who died demonstrated minimal increase in
fibronectin
levels after 1 to 4 days of TPN.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Fibronectin. A new nutritional parameter. 392 69
In a controlled study of
fibronectin
supplementation in
sepsis
, 11 ICU patients in septic shock were scheduled to receive either cryoprecipitate from 20-40 donors (n = 6) or 250-300 ml of stored plasma (n = 5) (two infusions over 24 h). We wanted to: compare some "conventional" DIC variables in the ICU (platelet count, prothrombin complex = NT, FDP) to additional variables:
Fibronectin
(Fn), fibrinogen (Fg), F V, FVIII R:Ag, F VIII:C activity, F XII, plasminogen (Plg), antiplasmin (AP), antithrombin (AT), kallikrein inhibiting activity (KI) and spontaneous proteolytic activity (SPA): study the effects of cryoprecipitate or plasma infusion on three variables. Samples were taken before the first infusion, and 24 and 48 h after. At onset, high levels (p less than .001 when compared to blood donors) of Fg, VIIIR:Ag and VIII:C were seen. KI levels were within the normal range. F V was low (p less than .05). Fn, NT, XII, Plg, AP and AT were markedly low (p less than .001). SPA showed great variation. When compared to 28 patients with severe infections, but not in septic shock, the ICU group had higher VIIIR:Ag (p less than .05) and VIII:C (p less than .01), and lower XII, Plg, AP and AT (p less than .001). FDP was elevated in all ICU patients. Five patients were thrombocytopenic, and in these a pattern with low levels of Plg and AT was observed. Fn did not correlate well to the other variables measured. These results indicate a marked activation of coagulation and fibrinolysis in these severely ill patients.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Fibronectin and other DIC-related variables in septic ICU patients receiving cryoprecipitate. 393 20
Complex immunologic alterations occur following thermal injury. To further delineate the intricacies of the immune response, a longitudinal profile of immunologic parameters was investigated in burned patients with specific reference to clinical criteria (resuscitation, plasma exchange, surgical excisions,
sepsis
). During a 17-month period, 26 adult patients with a mean age of 32.6 years and a mean burn size of 45.6% TBSA were evaluated with serial (twice weekly) assays of immunocompetence. The immunologic variables monitored included complement components,
fibronectin
, immunoglobulins, acute-phase reactants, serum proteins, catecholamines, and the mixed lymphocyte reaction. Resuscitation from burn shock and clinical
sepsis
were associated with a wide array of serologic abnormalities and lymphocyte suppression. Plasma exchange and surgical excision and grafting procedures were also characterized by multiple serologic changes and improvement in lymphocyte function. No specific serologic parameter correlated well with cellular function; however, patterns of humoral alterations were consistently present and may represent a combined effect.
...
PMID:Immunologic parameters in burned patients: effect of therapeutic interventions. 394 32
Plasma
fibronectin
deficiency has been documented in critically ill surgical, trauma, and burn patients. Human plasma
fibronectin
was isolated by gelatin-Sepharose affinity chromatography and evaluated with respect to its opsonic activity following pasteurization, its in vivo clearance kinetics, and its short-term influence on cardiovascular hemodynamics in postoperative septic sheep. Six patients with low plasma
fibronectin
levels were also evaluated with respect to temporal changes of immunoreactive
fibronectin
and opsonic activity following infusion of
fibronectin
at a dose calculated to elevate the plasma
fibronectin
level to 400 micrograms/ml. With utilization of three different in vitro radioisotopic phagocytic assays, i.e., liver slice assay, peritoneal macrophage monolayer assay, and Kupffer cell monolayer assay, retention of opsonic activity by
fibronectin
following pasteurization was documented. The normal biphasic kinetics associated with plasma clearance of
fibronectin
were also not altered by pasteurization. In postoperative septic sheep with hemodynamic instability, intravenous infusion of 500 mg of purified human
fibronectin
initiated no abnormal hemodynamic response. Indeed, as compared with placebo, the infusion of
fibronectin
into the postoperative septic sheep resulted in a more stable systemic vascular resistance and pulmonary vascular resistance with a higher arterial pressure. It also elevated immunoreactive
fibronectin
levels (p less than 0.05) and increased opsonic activity (p less than 0.05). Surgical, trauma, and burn patients (ages 18 to 80 years) with low plasma
fibronectin
levels (160 to 236 micrograms/ml) manifested no disturbance in cardiovascular, respiratory, or hematologic parameters following
fibronectin
infusion (590 to 988 mg per patient), but did display an early increase of opsonic activity. This standardized, pasteurized, and opsonically active preparation of purified human plasma
fibronectin
(5.0 mg/ml after reconstitution) has utility for future randomized clinical trials in injured patients with
sepsis
.
...
PMID:Reversal of opsonic deficiency in surgical, trauma, and burn patients by infusion of purified human plasma fibronectin. Correlation with experimental observations. 394 37
Plasma
fibronectin
concentrations were significantly (P less than 0.001) below the reference range in dogs with disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) secondary to nonlymphomatous neoplasia, acute necrotizing pancreatitis,
sepsis
, chronic active hepatitis, and heat stroke. There was no statistical evidence of a group effect. Decrease in
fibronectin
concentration was associated with severe DIC, although no attempt was made to correlate
fibronectin
concentration with prognosis. These findings parallel those reported for severely ill human beings with diseases associated with DIC. They exemplify the potential of spontaneous diseases in animals as models for the study of human disease.
...
PMID:Plasma fibronectin concentrations in dogs with disseminated intravascular coagulation. 400 93
Plasma
fibronectin
is regarded to play an important part in a decrease of the resistance to infections. To specify the role of
fibronectin
in the pathogenesis of infectious complications in patients with depressions of hemopoiesis, the content of this opsonin was measured by ELISA in 113 patients with different patterns of hemoblastoses, lymphoproliferative diseases and with an aplastic syndrome. In 42 patients, the concentration of opsonin was measured in the presence of the superimposed infection of varying gravity. The
fibronectin
content was examined in 39 patients before, during and after completion of the cytostatic polychemotherapy. It turned out that in patients with paraproteinemic hemoblastoses, lymphogranulomatosis, aplastic anemia, chronic lympholeukemia, acute lympho- and myelo(mono)blastic leukemias, cyclic neutropenia, chronic myelosis and hematosarcomas, the concentration of
fibronectin
remained normal in the absence of infections. The computation of the linear correlation ratio did not reveal any association between the opsonin level and the concentration of neoplastic elements in the peripheral blood. Repeated measurements of the
fibronectin
level in patients whose underlying disease ran its course in association with marked neoplastic fever failed to detect any deficiency of the glycoprotein. The lowering of the
fibronectin
level was recorded in patients with a grave concomitant infection of the type of
sepsis
, necrotic enteropathy and lobar pneumonia. The degree of opsonin deficiency correlated with the patients' disease gravity. Prolonged reduction in the blood
fibronectin
level was of unfavourable prognostic importance. Cytostatic polychemotherapy, myelotoxic agranulocytosis as well as infectious complications of low gravity did not influence the concentration of
fibronectin
.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Plasma fibronectin level in patients with depression of hematopoiesis]. 404 64
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>