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Query: UMLS:C0243026 (sepsis)
52,417 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Acute cholangitis due to intrahepatic stones is frequently associated with biliary sepsis. Emergency surgery for these high-risk patients is usually associated with a high mortality. Therefore, we recommend nonoperative methods for the management of this acute disease. Percutaneous transhepatic cholangiography and drainage (PTCD) combined with antibiotic and fluid treatment was used successfully in the management of 41 patients with acute pyogenic cholangitis due to intrahepatic stones. The general condition of these patients improved after treatment with PTCD. Repeated cholangiography should be performed so that the entire biliary tree and lesions can be viewed. Elective surgery (21 patients) or removal of the stone through the sinus tract via PTCD (14 patients) was performed when the patients' general condition improved following emergency PTCD. Therefore, we recommend PTCD over emergency surgery in the treatment of acute septic intrahepatic stones.
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PMID:Ultrasonic guided percutaneous transhepatic bile drainage for cholangitis due to intrahepatic stones. 327 93

The effect of total parenteral nutrition (TPN) as sole therapy was studied in 30 consecutive cases of complicated Crohn's disease. After insertion of a Broviac-type central venous catheter patients were nourished parenterally for 3 weeks in the hospital and then for an additional 9 weeks at home. During this time no medication or oral intake was allowed. Surgery was avoided in 25 patients by TPN. These patients returned to work, ate normal meals and needed no medical support. In 5 cases it was not possible to control the acute disease and the patients were treated by resection. During TPN, catheter-related sepsis occurred in 3 patients (0.9 cases/1000 days TPN) and catheter embolism in 2. Four other patients developed intrahepatic cholestasis. A relapse of Crohn's disease was observed in 17 cases 3-48 months after the course of TPN. The cumulative recurrence rate is 60 per cent after 2 years and 85 per cent after 4 years. Compared with the results of resection, obtained from a 10-year period before TPN was instituted at our hospital, the cumulative recurrence rate after TPN is four times higher. It is concluded that TPN is not an alternative to resection in the treatment of Crohn's disease and should be reserved for patients with multifocal lesions, when surgery is not advisable because of the risk of a short bowel syndrome.
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PMID:Total parenteral nutrition as the sole therapy in Crohn's disease--a prospective study. 640 50

These studies have indicated some quantitative aspects of the kallikrein kinin system in sepsis. While other investigators have noted the fall in plasma kininogen in patients with sepsis, e.g. Erdos and colleagues (23), this study has indicated that it is the fall in the LMWK that is significant in these patients. LMWK comprises of three-quarters of the total plasma kininogen and its consumption can lead to the production of 2.24 million picograms bradykinin/ml plasma. In health bradykinin concentration is of the order of 100-400 picograms/ml. It is not unreasonable to suggest therefore, that bradykinin levels are increased in acute disease and other investigators have shown this by direct assay of the peptide in such patients. The present study has shown that once bradykinin is generated in the circulation in terms of ng/ml, even with passage through the lung, systemic effects occur, namely reduction in TPR and a fall in CO and BP. Thus, bradykinin could be the humoral factor responsible for the hyperdynamic state and systemic hypotension in severe sepsis. It is apparent that metabolism of bradykinin involves more than simply clearance of the peptide. It appears that bradykinin can stimulate the production of other vasoactive mediators by the lung. The consumption of LMWK in sepsis indicates that it is not plasma kallikrein activity but rather non-specific kininogenase activity that is critical. This may be important not only from the viewpoint of kinin generation, but also because of the consumption of plasma protease inhibitors. A mechanism to control or inhibit such protease activity offers a possible therapeutic approach to circulatory failure in these patients.
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PMID:The kallikrein-kinin system in the acutely-ill: (A) changes in plasma kininogen in acutely-ill patients. (B) the efficacy of pulmonary clearance of bradykinin. 655 53

Six of seven patients with acute pancreatitis who were intractable to prolonged medical therapy underwent successful endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP) followed by immediate operative therapy. All of these patients had surgically correctable lesions consistent with chronic pancreatitis. There was one associated mortality and no morbidity. The conditions of the surviving six patients were significantly improved in the immediate postoperative period, and long-term follow-up has been encouraging. Pancreaticojejunostomy and conservative resection appeared to have good results. The timing of the operation immediately after ERCP in patients with acute pancreatic pathology eliminated problems with exacerbation or sepsis. Patients whose clinical conditions do not improve with aggressive medical therapy for acute pancreatitis may have both chronic and acute disease that is amenable to operative therapy.
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PMID:Acute and subacute pancreatitis. Role of surgery and endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography. 736 68

A consecutive series of restorative proctocolectomy for ulcerative colitis was reviewed to determine whether an emergency restorative proctocolectomy procedure leads to a higher morbidity, more especially anastomotic leakage. Severity of illness and nature of surgery were divided in two categories: (1) no acute disease and elective surgery (18 patients), (2) acute disease requiring emergency surgery either immediately or within one week of admission (12 patients). Morbidity after elective surgery was 27% and after emergency surgery 66% (P < 0.06). Pouch-anal leakage occurred in 11% and 41% respectively (P = 0.08). Five risk factors significantly influenced the leak rate including preoperative white blood cell count > 10,000/microliter (P < 0.02), urgent nature of surgery (P < 0.02), the combination of leucocytosis and urgent nature of surgery (P = 0.02), the combination of leucocytosis and preoperative corticosteroid dose equivalent to > or = 200 mg hydrocortisone/24 h (P = 0.006), postoperative pelvic haematoma (P < 0.05). In conclusion, restorative proctocolectomy is contraindicated in emergency circumstances, especially in patients with signs of sepsis on a high corticosteroid dose. To reduce operative risk and number of procedures required, patients with relapsing ulcerative colitis should be referred for restorative proctocolectomy while being in remission.
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PMID:Restorative proctocolectomy in elective and emergency cases of ulcerative colitis. 806 93

The adult respiratory distress syndrome is a common cause of respiratory failure; however, its incidence, risk factors, course, and mortality rate for children remain incompletely understood. A 24-month surveillance of pediatric intensive care admissions identified 60 children with adult respiratory distress syndrome constituting 2.7% of such admissions, 8% of total days spent in a pediatric intensive care unit, and 33% of deaths. The mortality rate was 62% (confidence interval, 48.2% to 73.9%). Adult respiratory distress syndrome occurred in approximately 12% of children admitted for sepsis, viral pneumonia, smoke inhalation, or drowning. A low incidence (< 3%) was observed in children admitted with pulmonary contusion or multiple trauma. Ongoing changes in measures of pulmonary gas exchange varied with the magnitude of alveolar injury; no differences were associated with the underlying acute disease or lung injury mechanism. Efficiency of oxygenation differed among outcome groups by the second day after onset of adult respiratory distress syndrome. An alveolar-arterial oxygen tension difference > 420 was the best early predictor of death (sensitivity 80%, specificity 87%, positive predictive value 87%, negative predictive value 80%, and odds ratio 26.7). We conclude that adult respiratory distress syndrome behaves clinically as a single disease regardless of the underlying cause; its course and outcome are dependent on the magnitude of alveolar injury. We speculate that strategies for minimizing secondary lung injury may benefit all patients with adult respiratory distress syndrome.
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PMID:Adult respiratory distress syndrome in children: associated disease, clinical course, and predictors of death. 817 78

In medical patients there are numerous and variable risk factors for deep vein thrombosis. Placebo-controlled clinical trials are rare. The efficacy of standard heparin or low molecular weight heparin for the prevention of deep vein thrombosis is clearly demonstrated for patients with recent myocardial infarction, ischaemic stroke with hemiplegia or severe pulmonary sepsis with lung failure. Pharmacological prophylaxis is probably also efficient in patients with a severe acute disease and a certain history of deep vein thrombosis. For all other medical and especially for bedridden elderly patients, use of low molecular weight heparin might decrease the incidence of deep vein thrombosis but might not modify the overall mortality. In these situations, placebo-controlled clinical trials are needed for best evaluation of the benefit-risk ratio.
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PMID:[Synthesis: certainties/uncertainties in the prevention of venous thrombosis in medical patients]. 1007 Feb 35

Prophylaxis of deep vein thrombosis with standard heparin and low molecular weight heparin has been studied in many clinical trials in surgical patients and in few and various medical conditions in hospitalized subjects. Clinical trials have been conducted in patients with recent myocardial infarction, heart failure, stroke, pulmonary sepsis, cancer, or any acute disease with a high risk factors for deep vein thrombosis (previous thromboembolism, thrombophilia, obesity, recent bedridden, dehydratation.). The combination of a high risk disease with a high risk factor related to the history of the patient might reasonably conduct to a prophylaxis with low molecular weight heparins. The duration of this treatment has to be short and limited to the period of the acute medical condition inducing a high risk for deep vein thrombosis. Prophylaxis has to be offered to patients with ischemic stroke, cardiac failure, recent myocardial infarction, active cancer or any other acute medical disease in patients with a previous thromboembolism or thrombophilia history. Bedridden status and age are not, by themselves, an indication for prophylaxis with heparins. A widespread diffusion of these recommendations is needed to reduce overprescriptions.
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PMID:[Prevention of deep venous thrombosis in medical patients]. 1089 73

Proinflammatory mediators such as tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF) have been implicated in the pathophysiology in a number of acute disease states. Tumor necrosis factor-alpha can contribute to cell death, apoptosis, and organ dysfunction. Tumor necrosis factor-alpha can be generated with sepsis or ischemia-reperfusion by activation of cell mitogen-activated protein kinases and nuclear factor kappa B, leading to TNF production. A number of strategies to modulate TNF have been recently explored, including factors directed toward mitogen-activated protein kinases, TNF transcription, anti-inflammatory ligands, heat shock proteins, and TNF-binding proteins. However, TNF may also play an important role in the adaptive response to injury and inflammation. Control of the deleterious effects of TNF and other proinflammatory cytokines represents a realistic goal for clinical emergency medicine. The purpose of this article is to provide a background of relevance to emergency medicine academicians on the production and regulation of TNF, the acute effects of TNF on pathophysiology, and the rationale for therapeutic interventions directed toward TNF and the clinical experience with these strategies.
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PMID:Bench to bedside: tumor necrosis factor-alpha: from inflammation to resuscitation. 1095 39

Mitochondria, that provide most of the ATP needed for cell work, and that play numerous specific functions in biosyntheses and degradations, as well as contributing to Ca2+ signaling, also play a key role in the pathway to cell death. Impairment of mitochondrial functions caused by mutations of mt-genome, and by acute processes, are responsible for numerous diseases. The involvement of impaired mitochondria in the pathogenesis of sepsis is discussed. By means of the skinned fiber technique and high resolution respirometry, we have detected significantly reduced rates of mitochondrial respiration in heart and skeletal muscle of endotoxaemic rabbits. Mitochondria from heart were more affected than those from skeletal muscle. Decreased respiration rates were accompanied by reduced activities of complex I + III of the respiratory chain. Endotoxin-caused impairment was also detectable at the level of the Langendorff perfused heart, where the coronary vascular resistance was significantly increased. For an investigation of the influence of bacteraemia on the mitochondrial respiratory chain, baboons were made septic by infusion of high and low amounts of E. coli. For complex I + III and II + III, a clear dose-dependent decrease was detectable and in animals which died in septic shock, a further decrease of enzyme activities in comparison to the controls were found. These results are discussed in the light of current knowledge on the role of mitochondria in cell pathology in respect to sepsis. In conclusion, we present evidence that mitochondrial function is disturbed during sepsis. Besides ischaemic and poison-induced disturbances of mitochondrial function, sepsis is a further example of an acute disease where impaired mitochondria have to be taken into account.
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PMID:Mitochondrial dysfunction in sepsis: evidence from bacteraemic baboons and endotoxaemic rabbits. 1241 53


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