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Query: UMLS:C0243026 (
sepsis
)
52,417
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
This brief review of abdominal emergencies is by no means encyclopedic. Indeed, it simply reflects the multiplicity of problems that can occur and suggests the need for a high index of suspicion and an optimistic attitude toward their solution. In addition, the surgeon must keep in mind the fact that cancer patients may also suffer acute abdominal distress from extra-abdominal causes such as pneumonia, myocardial infarction, diabetes mellitus, and hematologic abnormalities such as porphyria or
sickle cell anemia
. Inflammatory bowel disease, pelvic inflammatory disease, acute hepatitis or other similar problems more commonly seen in general hospital populations may also develop. Consultations for an acute condition of the abdomen in patients receiving marrow-suppressing chemotherapy are challenging problems and repeated examination every few hours is required to detect subtle changes. Hypovolemia,
sepsis
, confusion and unexplained metabolic acidosis may be the only criteria for surgical exploration. An unnecessary operation in a leukopenic and thrombocytopenic patient is indeed risky, but failure to drain an occult abscess or resect a perforated segment of bowel is always lethal. An additional consideration is the likelihood of response to further treatment of the underlying disease. Unless further effective therapy is unavailable, pessimism is unwarranted.
...
PMID:Abdominal emergencies. 31 58
The experience with 45 patients with lung abscess over a three-year period at the University College Hospital (UCH), Ibadan, is presented. This study confirms the rarity of this disease among Nigerian children and its prevalence in young adults in the third and fourth decades of life. The most common presenting symptoms were purulent cough, chest pain, fever, and life-threatening hemoptysis which was the sole indication for emergency operation in 14 out of 16 patients who were treated surgically. The predominance of these abscesses in the right lung, especially in the superior segment of the lower lobe, supports the fact that aspiration of infected material, following depressed level of consciousness, esophageal obstruction, foreign bodies, and oral
sepsis
form the major causative factors in patients with lung abscess. The frequent association of
sickle cell disease
, bronchiectasis, hypertension, and pulmonary aspergilloma contribute significantly to the morbidity and mortality attendant to this disease in our environment. Twenty-nine patients were treated medically with five deaths and 16 patients were treated surgically with six deaths. The high operative mortality (37.5 percent) in this series was due to the extreme emergency conditions under which these patients were operated.
...
PMID:Lung abscess: a review of three-years' experience at the University College Hospital, Ibadan. 42 74
We conclude that DIC can occur as a result of sickle cell crisis in the absence of
sepsis
and we recommend that patients with
sickle cell disease
, particularly those with hemoglobin SC disease, presenting in crisis should be considered at risk for the development of disseminated intravascular coagulation. With symptomatic treatment and improvement of the crisis, our patient's coagulopathy resolved.
...
PMID:Disseminated intravascular coagulation in sickle cell crisis. 43
Functional asplenia develops in children with
sickle cell anemia
. This asplenia is related to the increased incidence of bacterial
sepsis
that has been documented in these patients. With the use of direct-interference contrast microscopy to quantitate splenic function, we studied children with the sickle hemoglobinopathies. A gradual increase in splenic dysfunction with increasing age was documented in children with homozygous
sickle cell disease
. Children with the sickle variants also seem to manifest degrees of splenic dysfunction. Direct-interference contrast microscopy is a simple quantitative technique for the evaluation of splenic function in children with the sickle hemoglobinopathies.
...
PMID:RBC surface pits in the sickle hemoglobinopathies. 43 77
We have encountered two cases of late calcification of the porcine heterograft. A patient in chronic renal failure died of
sepsis
and endocarditis fifteen months after replacement of the mitral and tricuspid valves. At postmortem examination, both heterograft valves exhibited severe calcification and thrombosis. A second patient with rheumatic heart disease and
sickle cell disease
underwent mitral valve replacement for severe regurgitation. Thirty months later, cardiac catheterization revealed prosthetic valve stenosis. The valve was replaced successfully, and the excised heterograft exhibited severe calcification with restriction of leaflet motion. Although calcification of the porcine heterograft is known to occur in patients with infection or disorders of calcium metabolism, dysfunction of the heterograft is rare in our experience.
...
PMID:Calcific stenosis of the porcine heterograft. 45 40
A total of 422 patients with sickle cell disorders have been observed for 3,442 patient years. During this period, 53 episodes of septicemia or meningitis occurred, indicating a risk of 12.5% from these infections for each individual. If only patients with SS hemoglobinopathy (
sickle cell anemia
) (323 patients) are considered, the risk was 15.2%. The case fatality ratios for
sepsis
and meningitis were 35% and 10%, respectively. Disease due to Streptococcus pneumoniae occurred, almost exclusively, among children with SS hemoglobinopathy who were less than 5 years of age. After the first decade, illnesses among patients with all types of sickle cell disorders were frequently associated with an identifiable source of infection, a chronic course, and frequent involvement of Gram-negative organisms.
...
PMID:Bacterial meningitis and septicemia in sickle cell disease. 87 15
Twelve infants with
sickle cell anemia
identified in the course of a cord blood screening program have been followed prospectively for up to three years of age. The development of hemolytic anemia paralleled the postnatal decline in fetal hemoglobin and was evident in all infants by 12 weeks of age. Vasoocclusive episodes occurred in more than half the infants and seven aplastic crises were documented in four patients. Febrile illnesses were common and one of the twelve infants developed pneumococcal
sepsis
. This study also demonstrated that functional asplenia is an acquired defect in
sickle cell disease
. The onset of functional asplenia was documented with splenic scans in six of the nine infants followed for more than one year after birth. There have been no deaths in this series.
...
PMID:Prospective study of sickle cell anemia in infancy. 94 13
The most dramatic recent advance in the care of young children with
sickle cell disease
was the demonstration by a cooperative study that the use of oral penicillin prophylaxis is highly effective in decreasing the risk of pneumococcal
sepsis
. Subsequently, the need for more comprehensive education of the parents of these children to ensure compliance with penicillin administration has become apparent. Over the past 4 years, the Mid-South
Sickle Cell Disease
Program has used a seven-phase educational process for the parents of more than 200 infants with newly diagnosed
sickle cell disease
. This has resulted in excellent compliance and a marked decrease in the incidence of pneumococcal
sepsis
among sickle cell patients at our center.
...
PMID:A successful education program for parents of infants with newly diagnosed sickle cell disease. 154 63
Maternal mortality is examined from June 1980 to December 1986 at Mulago, Nsambyo, Old Kampala, Rubaga, and Mengo Hospitals in Kampala, Uganda. Clinical or immediate causes, direct and indirect, were recorded from case summary forms based on ICD9 definitions of obstetric complications. The nonabortion maternal mortality rate (NAMMR) was 2.65/1000 deliveries (580 deaths); the abortion-related maternal mortality rate (ARMMR) was 3.58/1000 abortions. The hospital maternal mortality rate was 2.0/1000 deliveries. 75% of maternal deaths of women of 28 weeks' gestation or more had delivered outside the hospital. NAMMR doubled between 1980-86, a statistically significant increase. ARMMR increases were almost significant. 75% were direct obstetric and 21% were indirect obstetric causes. 38% had clinical anemia, 29% had some
sepsis
, 18% had substantial bleeding, and 14% had obstructed labor. Other contributing conditions were pneumonia, ruptured uterus, laparotomy, evacuations and curettage, malaria, preeclampsia,
sickle cell anemia
, pulmonary embolism, malnutrition, tetanus, meningitis, prolonged labor, and hepatitis. At admission, 48% were in poor condition, 30% in good condition, and 22% in fair condition. 27% had
sickle cell anemia
, high blood pressure, multiple pregnancy, or malaria at admission. 64% were admitted within 24 hours after delivery, 67% 1-7 days after delivery, and 92% 7-42 days after delivery. Those in good condition were all admitted 7 days postdelivery. 41% of deaths were due to lack of drugs, 7% lack of fluids, 20% with theater problems, 14% with doctor-related factors, and 3% with midwife-related factors. Better information is needed on mortality before delivery, mortality in hospitals vs. outside, and mortality from abortion, and ectopic and hydatidiform molar pregnancies. An explanation given for the increase in maternal mortality is the decline in economic conditions. Abortion complications may be due to the concealment practiced. Causes are consistent with trends from the 1950s, 1960s, and 1970s in Uganda and developing countries in general. Availability and accessibility of gynecological and obstetric services needs great improvement. Training traditional birth attendants and obtaining rural ambulance services are also needed. Health workers lack creativity and imagination for developing country conditions; scarce resources are not the only problem.
...
PMID:Incidence and causes of maternal mortality in five Kampala hospitals, 1980-1986. 176 15
Children with
sickle cell disease
have a greatly increased potential for developing rapid and at times fatal
sepsis
from Streptococcus pneumoniae. Hospitalization and parenteral antibiotic treatment in all febrile children with
sickle cell disease
have thus become the standard of care at most sickle cell centers. As an alternative approach, we managed selected febrile children with
sickle cell disease
on an ambulatory basis with parenteral ceftriaxone to determine its safety and effectiveness in preventing
sepsis
and reducing the number of days of hospitalization. Twenty of 40 children who presented with significant fever met the study criteria and received ceftriaxone on an ambulatory basis. Three were subsequently hospitalized. Compared with a previous year, when all febrile children were admitted, ceftriaxone use reduced the days of hospitalization from 214 (6.3 +/- 1.6 days/patient) to 111 days (2.8 +/- 0.7 days/patient). The empiric use of ceftriaxone appears safe and effective, but it requires an expanded study over an extended period.
...
PMID:Febrile episodes in children with sickle cell disease treated on an ambulatory basis. 181 May 86
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