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Query: UMLS:C0085593 (
chills
)
4,268
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
During the first week of March 1974, a hospitalized patient being evaluated for hyperproteinemia and hypertension experienced fever,
chills
, and myalgia and showed pulmonary signs consistent with diffuse pneumonia. Subsequently, the findings from serologic tests confirmed that the patient had viral influenza. Seven other compromised hosts on the same ward developed symptoms of pneumonic influenza, and serologic data on three of the seven confirmed influenza A2. Additionally, a previously healthy young adult admitted with acute respiratory distress died of nonbacterial complications and was shown to have community-acquired influenza. The unusual features of the epidemic were the intrahospital localization of the epidemic in compromised hosts, the high rate of pneumonic complications, the low rate of secondary
bacterial infection
, and the severity of the viral pneumonia in the community-acquired case.
...
PMID:A nosocomial outbreak of influenza A. 85 36
Certain patients who have undergone coronary artery bypass grafts suffer from episodes of acute cellulitis, often repeatedly, in the saphenous vein donor extremity. We describe nine patients with this entity, five of whom suffered recurrent attacks (range, two to greater than 20). The mean interval between surgery and the initial bout of cellulitis was 15 months (range, two to 46 months). A characteristic clinical syndrome was present in the majority of patients that included the abrupt onset of
chills
, followed by fever (generally greater than 38.8 degrees C), prostration, and obvious cellulitis. Seven patients also suffered from tinea pedis; in two instances, measures to control the dermatophytosis were instituted and attacks ceased. The pathogenesis of the entity may involve complex interactions between fungal and bacterial agents. Factors such as direct
bacterial infection
, hypersensitivity to streptococcal exotoxins, and id reactions to dermatophytes are probably involved in varying combinations.
...
PMID:Recurrent cellulitis after coronary bypass surgery. Association with superficial fungal infection in saphenous venectomy limbs. 660 65
Recognition of pyrogen reactions in patients studied with multiple-use cardiac catheters led to recommendations regarding their cleaning and ultimately to the expensive practice of discarding catheters after a single use. Primarily because of cost considerations, our laboratory continued to clean and reuse catheters through 1981. This afforded an opportunity to assess the endemic rate of adverse reactions associated with this practice. We prospectively evaluated 341 patients who were studied with single-use or multiple-use catheters. The overall incidence of adverse reactions was: hypotension 27%, fever 3%,
chills
3%, and all three 0.6%. There were no statistically significant increases in these reactions associated with the reuse of catheters.
Bacterial infection
did not appear responsible for these reactions, and it is possible that they were due to angiographic dye. We conclude that careful cleaning and reuse of catheters does not create an obvious increase in the risk of infection, and it appears to play a minor role, if any, in the development of other adverse reactions.
...
PMID:Fever, chills, and hypotension following cardiac catheterization with single- and multiple-use disposable catheters. 683 52
Struvite renal stones are caused by infection of the urine with bacteria that synthesize the enzyme urease. Ammonium is released by the breakdown of urea by urease, the urine becomes highly alkaline, and magnesium ammonium phosphate (struvite) and carbonate apatite crystallize. Incorporation of the infecting bacteria within the developing stone, results in a focus of infection that is resistant to conventional antimicrobial therapy, and which is manifested clinically by repeated urinary tract infection caused by persistent bacteriuria. Extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy (ESWL) currently is accepted as the election treatment for most renal calculi. This trial examines the bacteriologic aspects pre and post-ESWL. Eighty adult patients, 47 females and 33 males, without clinical signs of urinary tract infections (UTI) were submitted to urine cultures pre and post-ESWL. The first 50 patients underwent during and post-ESWL, 150 blood cultures, which all proved to be negative, confirming very low risk of generalized sepsis. No patient presented fever,
chills
or rigors pre or postprocedures. With respect to urine cultures 43 patients (52.5%) had a pre-ESWL UTI, in comparison to 49 (60%) who had a UTI post-ESWL. The distribution of organisms pre and post-ESWL was as follows: Proteus mirabilis (22/22), Escherichia coli (11/11), Pseudomonas aeruginosa (4/5), Klebsiella pneumoniae (2/2), Enterobacter cloacae (0/1), Alcaligenes odorans (1/2) Enterococcus faecalis (1/3), Staphylococcus saprophyticus (1/2) and Candida albicans (1/1). In this study 6 patients presented bacteriuria post-ESWL probably due to bacteria from inside the calculi. According to these results, the risk of bacteremia seems to be very low. In 60% of staghorn renal stones we could demonstrate a
bacterial infection
.
...
PMID:[Staghorn renal lithiasis treated with shock waves. Bacteriologic aspects]. 765 75
Acute lobular nephritis is a focal
bacterial infection
localizer within the parenchyma of the kidney which may develops with abscess formation; clinical features of such evolution include, fever,
chills
, flank pain and the hematological findings of infective disease. Echographic pattern includes a law-level echogenic mass with a central hypoechoic or echo-free with sometimes may deform renal profile. Clinical picture and echographic pattern allow the diagnosis of acute lobular nephritis. In the present work we report 3 cases of lobular nephritis on which ultrasound study has permitted the correct diagnosis equally to TC and RM which also was performed. Furthermore the ultrasound imaging is a valid method to appreciate the clinical evolution of patient during therapy.
...
PMID:[Lobar nephritis: echographic diagnosis and follow-up]. 916 81
We performed a 17-year retrospective analysis of 10 cases of hepatocellular carcinoma presenting as pyogenic liver abscess. Spontaneous tumor necrosis and biliary obstruction caused by tumor thrombi, superimposed with
bacterial infection
, were the two major pathogeneses. Exact diagnosis of the underlying hepatocellular carcinoma was made for five of the 10 patients before management was attempted. Main clinical manifestations included fever,
chills
, right-upper-quadrant pain, malaise, anorexia, jaundice, and hepatomegaly. Characteristics such as middle age and male sex, seropositivity for hepatitis B and/or hepatitis C, chronic liver disease, unexplained anemia, marked weight loss, and a severely inversed albumin/globulin ratio raise suspicions about the underlying hepatocellular carcinoma. Management strategies included percutaneous drainage (n = 3), surgical drainage (n = 4), and hepatectomy (n = 3) in addition to administration of parenteral antibiotics in all cases. The prognosis was dismal, with a mean survival of 3.5 months (range, 8 days to 6 months).
...
PMID:Hepatocellular carcinoma presenting as pyogenic liver abscess: characteristics, diagnosis, and management. 959 57
Arteriovenous fistula between common iliac vessels is uncommon. Most of the reported cases are secondary to lumbar disc surgery. Mycotic aneurysm of iliac vessels caused by
bacterial infection
is even rarer. We describe the case of a 63 year old man with dyspnea, abdominal pain, bipedal edema,
chills
and fever. He had a right common iliac AVF as a result of a ruptured salmonella mycotic aneurysm, and the diagnosis was made by vascular duplex color scan.
...
PMID:Mycotic aneurysm leading to iliac arteriovenous fistula diagnosed by vascular duplex color scan. 969 55
A 61-year-old man presented to the emergency department of a community hospital with a 2-week history of fever,
chills
, and sudden extreme weakness of his right arm and lower extremities. He also had a cough, shortness of breath, nausea, abdominal pain, diarrhea, and myalgia. Though initially alert and cooperative, he quickly became unresponsive. In addition, he had hyponatremia, renal insufficiency, and compromised cardiopulmonary function. He was admitted to the intensive care unit for suspected
bacterial infection
and was started on broad-spectrum antibiotics. Chest radiograph revealed miliary infiltrates consistent with infectious emboli or metastatic carcinoma. Despite intensive resuscitation, the patient died 36 hours after admission. At autopsy multiple nodular lesions were observed on gross examination of the lungs, perihilar and paratracheal lymph nodes, and liver. Microscopic sections of the lung (Figure 1) and brain (Figures 2 and 3) are shown.
...
PMID:Fever, chills, and weakness in a 61-year-old man. 1637 68
The plants of genus Celastrus, distributed in Asia, have been used as natural insecticides and folk medicines to treat fever,
chill
, joint pain, edema, rheumatoid arthritis, and
bacterial infection
in China for a long time. This contribution reviews the chemical constituents, isolated from the plants in genus Celastrus in the past few decades, and their biological activities. The compounds listed are sesquiterpenes (beta-agarofurans), diterpenes, triterpenes, alkaloids, and flavonoids.
...
PMID:Chemical and pharmacological studies of the plants from genus Celastrus. 1923 57
The sternoclavicular joint is an unusual site for
bacterial infection
. In this case, we describe a 25-year-old man who presented to the emergency department with fever,
chills
, limited range of motion in the right upper limb along with complaints of severe pain and tenderness in the right upper chest wall and shoulder. He was admitted to the hospital for further evaluation. This patient admitted to a history of injecting heroin use during the previous three months. The diagnosis of septic arthritis of the right sternoclavicular joint was confirmed by blood culture and MRI of the sternoclavicular joint. This case is, to the best of our knowledge, the 25th recorded staphylococcal septic sternoclavicular arthritis. He received appropriate intravenous antibiotic therapy and subsequently was discharged two weeks later with complete clinical and laboratory recovery.
...
PMID:Septic arthritis of sternoclavicular joint: a case report of a rare finding in injecting drug users. 2043 32
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