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

An experience with penetrating cardiac injuries between 1974 and 1977 has permitted designation of particular findings as indications for emergent operations and appropriate therapeutic approaches. Of the 46 patients with cardiac trauma, 28 suffered gunshot wounds. Seventeen patients died, and 14 of the deaths occurred as a result of asystole, ventricular fibrillation or exsanguination during operation. Two patients died of neurologic sequelae following successful cardiac repair, and one died secondary to injury not disclosed by physical examination or roentgenogram. The surviving 29 patients had five major complications. Sepsis, organ system failure and cardiac defects rarely occurred despite rapidly performed thoracotomy and severe shock. Since delayed operation has been uniformly associated with adverse outcome and because postoperative complications of emergent pericardial exploration are mild, the following conclusions have been reached: 1) Mediastinal entrance wounds, severe hypotension and signs of cardiac tamponade are demonstrative of cardiac trauma. Therefore, virtually any combination of these physical signs mandates pericardial exploration. 2) Subxiphoid or transdiaphragmatic exploration (during laparotomy) of the pericardium has been valuable in diagnosis of suspected heart wounds. 3) Emergent cardiorrhaphy is the treatment of choice. Pericardiocentesis is at best only temporarily effective. Thoracotomies performed in the emergency room were uniformly unsuccessful. If possible, cardiorrhaphy should be done in the operating room. 4) Median sternotomy is the approach of choice. 5) The basic principles of management of cardiac injury are rapid diagnosis, relief of tamponade, control of hemorrhage, repair of cardiac defects and restoration of blood volume.
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PMID:Principles for the management of penetrating cardiac wounds. 45 48

Between 15th June 1991 and 15th August 1992, 40 patients underwent aortic valve replacement with the newly designed Edwards stentless aortic bioprosthesis 2500. The patients' ages ranged from 24 years to 80 years (mean 60.3 years). Preoperatively, 17 patients presented with pure aortic stenosis, three with aortic regurgitation and 20 with mixed lesion. The operations were performed with normothermic extracorporeal cardiopulmonary bypass and cold cardioplegic arrest. The implanted valves ranged in diameter from 21 mm to 27 mm. Ten patients received a subcoronary implantation, with the lower row of sutures being interrupted and the upper being continuous. The so-called miniroot technique was used in the other 30, also involving lower interrupted and running upper sutures after adaptation of the coronary ostia to the preformed openings in the graft. The aortic cross-clamp time ranged from 51 minutes to 94 minutes (mean 71 minutes). There was no operative mortality but three patients died early after the operation due to cardiac tamponade, sepsis and pneumonia. There was no late mortality or morbidity in the surviving patients up to 16 months postoperatively. Echocardiography, performed at discharge and twice a year thereafter showed no signs of significant valve incompetence in any patient, and continuous wave Doppler measurements indicated that resting pressure gradients across the aortic valve were low or absent. Our preliminary experience with the stentless aortic xenograft shows improved hemodynamic function as compared to stent mounted xenografts or mechanical prostheses. Further studies are needed, however, to establish the long-term performance of this device.
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PMID:Aortic valve replacement with stentless xenografts. 134 37

Percutaneous cardiopulmonary support system (PCPS) was applied for a 85 years old man with circulatory collapse caused by left ventricular free wall blow out rupture following acute anterior myocardial infarction. PCPS was started after the cardiac massage for 7 minutes without thoracotomy or release of cardiac tamponade and flow of ranging from 2.3 to 2.7 L/min/m2 was achieved. The patient was transferred to operating room and closure of the ventricular rupture was performed under the usual cardiopulmonary bypass. Postoperative recovery of cardiac function and consciousness was satisfactory but he was died of multiple organ failure caused by sepsis at 36 postoperative day. PCPS and consecutive surgical therapy seemed useful method for the treatment of left ventricular free wall blow out rupture.
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PMID:[A case report of successful surgical treatment following the emergency circulatory assist by percutaneous cardiopulmonary support system for acute postinfarction left ventricular free wall rupture]. 156 60

Systemic oxygen delivery (DO2) is normally four to five times higher than oxygen consumption (VO2), and VO2 is independent of DO2. If DO2 is decreased to less than twice VO2, a state of anaerobic metabolism and supply dependency occurs. Some authors have reported that this biphasic relationship is altered in the adult respiratory distress syndrome or sepsis to a condition of continuous supply dependency. If that were true, it would affect both our understanding and management of metabolism during sepsis. Therefore we measured VO2 and DO2 in a dog peritonitis model. DO2 was regulated with controlled pericardial tamponade. During sepsis VO2 increased 28% from a mean baseline of 5.6 to 7.3 cc O2/kg/min (p less than 0.005). As progressive cardiac tamponade was applied during sepsis, the DO2/VO2 ratio fell. When the DO2/VO2 ratio was greater than 2.4, VO2 remained independent of DO2. At DO2/VO2 ratios less than 2.4, VO2 was dependent on the level of DO2, and it diminished rapidly as DO2 decreased. Oxygen saturation in mixed venous blood (SvO2) consistently reflected the DO2/VO2 ratio in a fashion similar to that in normal dogs. A ratio of DO2/VO2 of 2.4 corresponded with an SvO2 of 42% +/- 12%, which was identified as a statistically significant critical SvO2 that marked onset of VO2 supply dependence. In this dog septic model, VO2 is independent of DO2 when DO2 is adequate. A state of continuous supply dependency does not exist. SvO2 reflects the status of the DO2/VO2 relationship in the septic state.
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PMID:Oxygen kinetics in experimental sepsis. 162 Dec 25

A 63-year-old male was burned when in a state of alcoholic intoxication, he fell head first into a bathtub filled with hot water and received burns covering 40 per cent BSA. Despite surgical wound debridement, a severe sepsis continued and a sudden cardiac arrest occurred. Autopsy revealed a large volume of blood in the pericardial space. The heart was ruptured through a myocardial abscess in the posterior wall of the left ventricle. The principle cause of his death was attributed to acute cardiac tamponade following cardiac rupture through a myocardial abscess.
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PMID:Rupture of the heart in a burn patient: a case report of free wall rupture of the left ventricle. 176 Jan 18

Two cases of systemic juvenile chronic arthritis, complicated by cardiac tamponade and eight previously reported cases are described. The clinical features and radiological, electrocardiographic, and echocardiographic findings were similar for all cases. One patient in this series was treated with corticosteroids and underwent pericardiectomy, dying of sepsis 30 days after surgery. The other patient was also treated with corticosteroids, underwent pericardiocentesis and developed fatal ventricular tachycardia. Of the 10 cases, only six were successfully treated. Early diagnosis and appropriate treatment are essential for a favourable outcome.
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PMID:Cardiac tamponade in juvenile chronic arthritis: report of two cases and review of publications. 227 Sep 64

Saccharomyces cerevisiae (brewer's or baker's yeast) is a common colonizer of human mucosal surfaces, but its role as a clinically important pathogen has been unclear. We report three cases of life-threatening invasive infection with S. cerevisiae resulting in pneumonia, liver abscess and sepsis, and disseminated infection with cardiac tamponade, respectively. A review of the English-language literature reveals 14 other cases of saccharomyces infection in humans. Severe immunosuppression, prolonged hospitalization, prior antibiotic therapy, and/or prosthetic cardiac valves are the settings where saccharomyces infection has been observed. Because Saccharomyces can be a common saprophytic contaminant, biopsy and pathologic confirmation of infection are often necessary for a definitive diagnosis. Amphotericin B is the treatment of choice for serious infections with this organism.
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PMID:Invasive infection with Saccharomyces cerevisiae: report of three cases and review. 219 48

The number of patients undergoing long-term hemodialysis and peritoneal dialysis is growing in the United States. To provide adequate emergent care to these patients emergency physicians must understand the alterations in normal physiologies present in these patients and how this may affect care. Cardiovascular disease and infection (especially Staphylococcus aureus sepsis) are the leading causes of death among dialysis patients. These patients are also subject to a significantly higher incidence of life-threatening electrolyte disturbances, particularly hyperkalemia and hypercalcemia, than the general population. Suicide, cardiac tamponade, intracranial hemorrhage, bleeding disorders, and bowel infarction are also much more frequent. The inability of dialysis patients to excrete drugs, metabolites, toxins, and fluids significantly alters their responses to common emergencies and should directly influence their care. Failure to recognize these differences in physiology may result in the use of standard forms of emergency therapy that may compound, rather than treat, the underlying disorder. Although most dialysis patients who come into an emergency department have conditions that can, and should, be managed by their nephrologist, the presence of a life threatening emergency requires prompt, appropriate therapy by the emergency physician.
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PMID:Emergencies in continuous dialysis patients: diagnosis and management. 240 66

A retrospective chart review identified 46 consecutive patients who underwent catheter drainage of the pericardium over 3 years. Cardiac tamponade was present in the majority of patients, and the underlying cause was tumour metastasis in 72%. Pericardial catheterization was accomplished by the Seldinger technique using the subxiphoid approach. Catheter insertion was successful in 42 of the 46 patients, and in only 1 was there a serious complication. The mean duration of catheter drainage was 3 days. The pericardial space was successfully drained in all but one patient, who subsequently required surgery. Intrapericardial chemotherapy was administered in 27 patients. There was no instance of catheter-associated sepsis. Supraventricular arrhythmias occurred in 19% of patients, but all were managed medically. There were no late complications attributable to the period of drainage. The authors conclude that catheter drainage of the pericardium is a safe and effective means of providing definitive drainage of the pericardial space.
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PMID:Catheter drainage of the pericardium: its safety and efficacy. 276 38

Extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) has been successful (greater than 80% survival) in 35 centers in greater than 900 newborns with severe respiratory failure having an estimated mortality of greater than 80% on conventional management. During the last 3 years we have treated 79 newborns with 74 survivors (94%). Their diagnoses included meconium aspiration, persistent fetal circulation, respiratory distress syndrome, congenital diaphragmatic hernia, and sepsis. Seven patients (9%) had life-threatening intrathoracic complications requiring emergent intervention while on ECMO: tension hemothorax (3), tension pneumothorax (2), and pericardial tamponade (2). Pericardial tamponade and tension hemothorax and pneumothorax show a similar pathophysiology of increasing intrapericardial pressure and decreasing venous return. Perfusion is initially maintained by the nonpulsatile flow of the ECMO circuit before further decrease in venous return results in decreasing ECMO flow and progressive hemodynamic deterioration. Each of the seven patients demonstrated a clinical triad that includes increasing PaO2 and decreasing peripheral perfusion (as evidenced by decreasing pulse pressure and decreasing SvO2) followed by decreasing ECMO flow with progressive deterioration. The diagnoses were confirmed by transillumination, chest x-ray, or cardiac echocardiogram. Initial emergent placement of a percutaneous drainage catheter was temporizing in all seven cases. However, four patients required emergent thoracotomy for definitive treatment while still on ECMO. All seven patients were weaned from ECMO and are short-term survivors (6 months to 3.5 years). As use of ECMO for newborn severe respiratory failure increases, responsible physicians must be familiar with life-threatening intrathoracic complications and appropriate treatment strategies.
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PMID:Life-threatening intrathoracic complications during treatment with extracorporeal membrane oxygenation. 320 57


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