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Query: UMLS:C0036690 (
sepsis
)
59,461
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Mechanisms of progression of
chronic renal failure
(
CRF
) have been well documented in the rat but may not be relevant in man. Factors which may modify clinical
CRF
include underlying disease, diet, hypertension, intercurrent events, and adverse or beneficial effects of drug therapy. It has been argued that progression in many forms of renal disease is inexorable below a certain level of renal function. In other diseases, eg primary malignant hypertension, analgesic nephropathy, function frequently improves in both the short and long term with appropriate management. Thus knowledge of the nature of the underlying disease is essential in assessing progression. The value of diet in preserving renal function has been debated, particularly the relative roles of protein and phosphate control. In our own unit, a prospective randomized study showed a benefit of protein restriction. Development of accelerated hypertension is an important cause of progression of renal disease and clinical and experimental evidence supports the view that non-accelerated hypertension is also a factor in progression, amenable to treatment. Various intercurrent events may accelerate progression and function may be lost permanently following
sepsis
, urinary tract obstruction, renal arterial or venous obstruction, hypotension and in some cases pregnancy. Numerous drugs can have deleterious effects on the kidney. The possibility that converting enzyme inhibitors might preserve renal function is attracting attention but in view of their side effects their place in therapy should be determined by prospective controlled studies in which the above factors are carefully considered.
...
PMID:Preservation of renal function in chronic renal failure. 141 42
Calcification of small subcutaneous arteries and arterioles is commonly found in patients with
chronic renal failure
(
CRF
), but the syndrome of acute ischemic necrosis of the skin and subcutaneous fat supplied by these vessels is relatively uncommon. The necrosis occurs during dialysis and after successful renal transplantation, and it is often fatal. Occlusion of the calcified arteries and associated microvessels by thrombi is reported infrequently, but it is relevant to the necrosis. However, the pathogenesis remains enigmatic. In the patient described here, who had
CRF
, bacteremia, and laboratory evidence of disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC), the distribution of thrombi and necrosis was mainly that of the calcified arteries which, therefore, probably played a role in the localization of the thrombi. An increased susceptibility of the endothelium of calcified vessels to the procoagulant effects of
sepsis
may be a contributing factor.
...
PMID:Acute skin and fat necrosis during sepsis in a patient with chronic renal failure and subcutaneous arterial calcification. 146 96
Since the development of recombinant DNA technology, there has been a rapid expansion of research concerning the use of recombinant DNA synthesized human growth hormone (rhGH) for the treatment of clinical disorders. rhGH has been used to treat patients with acute catabolic stress caused by surgery, trauma and
sepsis
, children with chronic renal insufficiency and impaired growth, patients undergoing maintenance hemodialysis who are malnourished, and individuals on weight reduction diets. These studies indicate that rhGH enhances protein balance in acutely stressed patients and in malnourished maintenance hemodialysis patients, promotes catch-up growth in children with
chronic renal failure
, and may reduce protein wasting and enhance lipolysis in obese individuals on weight reduction diets. Experimental studies suggest that in addition to enhancing anabolism, rhGH may increase both immune function and the rate of wound healing. Many, but not all, of the effects of rhGH are mediated through insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I). For example, the hyperglycemic and lipolytic effects of rhGH do not seem to be caused by IGF-I. Animal or human studies suggest that with severe malnutrition or severe
sepsis
, rhGH treatment may neither increase serum IGF-I levels nor promote anabolism. These observations provide a rationale for administering IGF-I as an anabolic hormone for severely malnourished or septic patients with renal failure. Further studies will be necessary to examine both the short-term and long-term potential benefits and adverse effects of rhGH or rhIGF-I treatment in these conditions.
...
PMID:The rationale for the use of growth hormone or insulin-like growth factor I in adult patients with renal failure. 146 73
A 35-year-old patient with symptomatic
chronic renal failure
secondary to hereditary nephritis underwent heparinization during urgent hemodialysis. Subclavian catheter insertion was complicated by staphylococcal
septicemia
which precluded Gore-tex graft placement. Arteriovenous fistula failed immediately postoperatively and thrombectomy was required. Heparin-induced thrombocytopenia was suspected and the test was strongly positive. Acetyl salicylic acid (ASA) 40 mg, was used with heparin for dialysis, and there were no episodes of gastrointestinal hemorrhage or access site thrombosis. The use of very low-dose ASA in this setting is reported.
...
PMID:Heparin-induced thrombocytopenia in renal failure. 151 85
The Prune Belly syndrome (PBS) is unfrequent. Fourteen cases have been followed in our unit during the last 20 years. Four infants (29%) died during the first months of life, because of neonatal
sepsis
(2 cases) or end-stage renal failure (2 cases). Among the other 10 cases, 6 (43%) had normal glomerular filtration rate at a mean age of 10 years 6 months (6 months to 15 years), 4 had
chronic renal failure
, including 3 cases who developed end-stage renal failure at 8, 8 years 8 months and 17 years respectively. Resection of an urethral obstruction was performed in 2 cases. This surgical indication remains widely accepted, while the current tendency is to limit ureteral surgery in PBS. Orchidopexy was performed in 4 children, 3 of them less than 6 years 6 months of age. Fertility of these early operated children remains to be established, as all adults reported in the literature remain sterile when orchidopexy was not performed or was performed after age 6.
...
PMID:[Prognosis of prune belly syndrome]. 168 92
As newer treatment modalities become available for patients with severe lupus nephritis, it becomes increasingly important to identify patients at risk for renal failure. In this study, the records of 90 children presenting with systemic lupus erythematosus over a 13-year period were reviewed. Nineteen were lost to follow-up prior to completion of the study. Of the 71 remaining children, 16 (22%) progressed to
chronic renal failure
. Persistent hypertension lasting greater than 4 months, anemia, abnormalities of the urinalysis, and elevated serum creatinine level were significantly associated with progression to renal failure. Sex, race, age, abnormalities of creatinine clearance, and 24-hour urine protein collection were not associated with progression to renal failure. Renal biopsies were obtained in 45 children. Biopsies were initially classified according to World Health Organization criteria. Diffuse proliferative glomerulonephritis was significantly associated with progression to renal failure. The 45 biopsies available were reviewed by one of the authors and categorized by activity and chronicity indices. Both the active lesions of fibrinoid necrosis, synechiae, tubular casts, and vasculitic lesions and the chronic lesion of glomerular sclerosis correlated with progression to renal failure. Of the 16 children who progressed to renal failure, 2 had cadaver kidney transplants and are well 5 years posttransplant; 4 had fulminant lupus and died within 1 month of commencing dialysis; 10 began chronic dialysis. Five of the 10 children on chronic dialysis died from
sepsis
. These data suggest that children with systemic lupus erythematosus who undergo dialysis do poorly.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Lupus nephritis: prognostic factors in children. 140 32
We reviewed the clinical histories of 14 patients diagnosed of acute obstructive renal failure due to bilateral or unilateral uric calculi in patients with only one functioning kidney for a period of 14 years (1974-1987). Urine was alkalinized in all patients. The increase in urine pH was effective in resolving the obstruction in 12 patients. The alkalinizing methods which succeeded in permeabilizing the urinary tract, considering each functioning kidney independently were: intravenous in 5/21, upstream urethral catheterism in 9/21 and by nephrostomy catheter in 5/21. Surgery was performed in 2 patients. In the later the calculi were of double composition. The most frequent complications were: urinary infection in 7/14 patients,
chronic renal failure
in 4/14 patients,
sepsis
in 3/14 patients and bacteremia in 2/14 patients. None of the patients died.
...
PMID:[Uric acid calculi: infrequent cause of acute renal failure]. 174 1
The factors predisposing to and complicating acute renal failure (ARF) in the medical intensive care unit (ICU), and their relative influence on outcome during ARF are unclear. We retrospectively evaluated the relative importance of age, prior chronic disease (including
chronic renal failure
),
sepsis
and organ system failure, for development and outcome of ARF in the medical ICU. Of 487 consecutively admitted patients, 78 (16%) had ARF, in 63% treated with renal replacement therapy. Mortality was 63%. Independently from each other, advancing age, prior chronic disease, and cardiovascular and pulmonary failure directly related to the development of ARF, while neurological failure related inversely.
Sepsis
only contributed to ARF prediction from these variables if cardiopulmonary failure was excluded. Advancing age, cardiovascular failure before and after onset of ARF, pulmonary failure before ARF and use of renal replacement therapy were the major independent factors directly related to ARF mortality, while prior
chronic renal failure
related inversely and
sepsis
did not contribute. Hence, the outcome of ARF in a medical ICU is largely dependent on factors predisposing to ARF, even though the severity and complications of ARF may partly contribute. Our results may help in deciding on the prevention and therapy of ARF in a medical ICU.
...
PMID:Acute renal failure in the medical intensive care unit: predisposing, complicating factors and outcome. 176
Aberrant immunologic host defenses associated with uremia may be a cause of the high incidence of
sepsis
in chronic hemodialysis (CHD) patients. This investigation determined the cytokine response of blood from five nondialyzed
chronic renal failure
(
CRF
) patients, five CHD patients, and five healthy controls (HC) after in vitro stimulation with 1 ng/ml Escherichia coli 0113 endotoxin. Concentrations of the cytokines TNF-alpha and IL-1 beta were determined by ELISA and were similar in all baseline and unspiked samples. TNF-alpha concentrations in
CRF
and CHD spiked samples were similar to each other but significantly greater (p less than 0.01) than in HC spiked samples. IL-1 beta concentrations in
CRF
, CHD, and HC-spiked samples were not significantly different. We conclude that
CRF
and CHD patients have enhanced TNF-alpha response, which may be related to uremia and not dialysis-related factors. Uremia does not potentiate IL-1 beta release.
...
PMID:Enhanced release of TNF-alpha, but not IL-1 beta, from uremic blood after endotoxin stimulation. 176 36
Calciphylaxis is a rare, severe complication of secondary hyperparathyroidism. Patients present with painful, violaceous, mottled skin lesions of the upper and lower extremities, which become necrotic and produce nonhealing ulcers. Gangrene of fingers and toes frequently requires amputation, produces nonhealing wounds, and can lead to
sepsis
and death. We reviewed the clinical course of five patients with calciphylaxis treated in our institution. The three men and two women (aged 47 to 72 years) had secondary hyperparathyroidism from
chronic renal failure
. All patients had severe pruritus, painful ulcers, and severe hyperphosphatemia with elevated serum calcium-phosphate product (greater than 12 mmol2/L2), but the serum parathyroid hormone levels were only moderately elevated. Most patients had medical calcification of medium and small blood vessels, and some had soft-tissue calcification visible on roentgenography. Treatment consisted of local wound care, antibiotics, phosphate-binding agents, and parathyroidectomy. Two patients died of uncontrollable
sepsis
. The three survivors had dramatic improvement of pain and ulcers after parathyroidectomy. Calciphylaxis is a limb- and life-threatening complication of secondary hyperparathyroidism. Diagnosis can be made by recognizing the characteristic painful skin lesions, ulcers, and gangrene of the digits, and patients should be treated with subtotal parathyroidectomy.
...
PMID:Calciphylaxis in secondary hyperparathyroidism. Diagnosis and parathyroidectomy. 192 21
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