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Query: UMLS:C0243026 (
sepsis
)
52,417
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In vitro production of PGI2 in canine gallbladders subjected to hypovolemic shock and Escherichia coli
sepsis
was studied to determine whether a precursor above arachidonic acid in the cyclooxyenase cascade might be operative in the production of prostacyclin, which, in turn, may play a role in the pathogenesis of acute acalculous
cholecystitis
(AC). L-alpha-phosphatidylcholine (LaP), an arachidonic acid precursor, was used as the test agent. LaP did not stimulate PGI2 production from either gallbladder surface in the hypovelimic animals or the mucosa of the septic shock group. However, it did stimulate PGI2 production from the SS serosa compared with controls, 1375 +/- 432 versus 633 +/- 198 pg/cm2/min (P less than .05). In conclusion, lack of stimulation of PGI2 in the hypovolemic model suggests that PGI2 does not play a role in AC. Alternatively, it may play a role in preventing this disease process in septic shock. This study demonstrates the use of precursors of arachidonic acid and the cyclooxygenase pathway as active participants in the production of PGI2, although it is unclear whether the prostacyclin produced helps prevent AC in septic shock.
...
PMID:L-alpha-phosphatidylcholine-induced stimulation of PGI2 production in canine gallbladders following hypovolemic shock and Escherichia coli sepsis. 192 May 4
Surgical intervention after vascular surgery usually occurs as a result of bleeding or thrombosis, whereas general surgical problems requiring operation after vascular surgery are unusual. The purpose of this study was to review the results of operations for general surgical problems done soon after major vascular surgery. From January 1985 to December 1989, 1,236 major vascular procedures were performed, and 15 patients developed significant postoperative general surgical problems including perforated duodenal ulcer (2), perforated diverticular disease (2), evisceration and dehiscence (2), liver infarct (1), gangrenous
cholecystitis
(2), clostridial myonecrosis (1), pseudomembranous colitis (1), and small bowel obstruction (4). The overall mortality was very high (47%), and the chance of dying was significantly higher (p less than 0.05) if the initial vascular procedure was an emergency (100% mortality). All the patients who died (n = 7) succumbed to
sepsis
. There was a long delay in diagnosis in all groups; however, the delay did not correlate with mortality. Although this is a study of a small group of patients with a very heterogenous group of complications, several observations can be made: (1) a general surgical problem after vascular surgery carries a very high mortality; (2) general surgical complications in postoperative vascular patients in whom the initial procedure was an emergency are very poorly tolerated and almost uniformly lethal; and (3) these elderly patients have multiple medical problems and seem unlikely to tolerate any septic insult.
...
PMID:General surgical problems requiring operation in postoperative vascular surgery patients. 192 85
During 10 years 3000 patients were operated upon for chronic calculous
cholecystitis
. Twenty of these patients died during 30 days after operation, in 16 of them death resulted from incompetence of the vital organs. Endotoxicosis and polyorganic insufficiency after technically correct operations for chronic calculous
cholecystitis
are thought by the authors to be a variant of anaerobic infection with possible development of
sepsis
.
...
PMID:[Sudden death after an operation for gall stones]. 196 20
Patients with the acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS) frequently develop hepatic dysfunction. Although hepatic injury may indirectly result from malnutrition, hypotension, administered medications,
sepsis
, or other conditions, the hepatic injury is frequently due to opportunistic hepatic infection, directly related to AIDS. Infection with Mycobacterium avium intracellulare typically occurs in patients with advanced immunocompromise and with systemic symptoms due to widely disseminated infection. In contrast, hepatic tuberculosis often occurs with less advanced immunocompromise. Cytomegaloviral infection may produce a hepatitis. Cytomegaloviral and cryptosporidial infections have been implicated as causes of acalculous
cholecystitis
and of a secondary sclerosing cholangitis. About 10-20% of patients with AIDS have chronic hepatitis B infection. These patients tend to develop minimal hepatic inflammation and necrosis. The clinical findings in patients with hepatic cryptococcal infection are usually due to concomitant extrahepatic infection. Hepatic histoplasmosis usually develops as part of a widely disseminated infection with systemic symptoms. Hepatic involvement by Kaposi's sarcoma is rarely documented ante mortem because an unguided liver biopsy is an insensitive diagnostic procedure. Patients with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma of the liver typically have lymphadenopathy, hepatomegaly, and systemic symptoms. As a pragmatic approach, patients with liver dysfunction and HIV-related disease should have a sonographic or computerized tomographic examination of the liver. Patients with dilated bile ducts should undergo endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography because opportunistic infection may produce biliary obstruction. Patients with a focal hepatic lesion should be considered for a guided liver biopsy. Patients with a significantly elevated serum alkaline phosphatase level should be considered for a percutaneous liver biopsy. When performed for these indications, liver biopsy will demonstrate a significant disease involving the liver in about 50% of patients with AIDS and in about 25% of patients who are HIV seropositive but who are not known to have AIDS. The clinical impact of a diagnostic biopsy is blunted by a lack of efficacious therapy for many opportunistic infections.
...
PMID:Hepatobiliary manifestations of the acquired immune deficiency syndrome. 198 33
We report on the rare association of Hodgkin's disease with systemic lupus erythematosus. Two years after the diagnosis of systemic lupus erythematosus, the patient developed upper abdominal pain, jaundice, splenomegaly, and fever of unknown origin. He had a rapidly fatal clinical course, despite being treated for systemic lupus erythematosus,
cholecystitis
, and possible
sepsis
. Autopsy revealed Hodgkin's disease, lymphocyte-depletion type, involving lymph nodes, liver, spleen, and bone marrow. The awareness of the association of Hodgkin's disease with systemic lupus erythematosus and its modes of presentation will help in the early diagnosis and management of such patients.
...
PMID:Hodgkin's disease associated with systemic lupus erythematosus. 205 Mar 74
Clinical and bacteriological data from 55 patients who developed septicemia within 3 days after ERCP were collected. Forty-four patients presented with septicemia after therapeutic endoscopy, with incomplete drainage in forty, eight after diagnostic ERCP performed in obstructed bile ducts in another center and not followed by endoscopic therapy, and three with a normal common bile duct after diagnostic ERCP. The incidence of septicemia is significantly higher in cases of malignant obstruction than in benign obstruction (21% vs 3%; p less than 0.01), due mainly to the problems of drainage associated with tumoral infiltration. Forty-eight patients (87%) had incomplete bile duct drainage when they developed septicemia, and among the seven remaining cases, 3 had
cholecystitis
and 3 abscesses in the biliopancreatic area. Previous diagnostic ERCP without drainage was also clearly associated with septicemia after therapeutic ERCP. The most commonly isolated bacteria from blood and bile cultures were Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Escherichia coli. P. aeruginosa was observed mainly in patients referred from other centers after previous diagnostic ERCP, and was unusual in patients without previous ERCP. It is associated with problems in the disinfection of the scopes. Six deaths were attributed to
sepsis
, always in patients with incomplete biliary drainage which could not be improved. In most of the cases, septicemia after ERCP is related to incomplete bile duct drainage, and in some cases, to biliopancreatic infected collections. Careful disinfection of the endoscopes and other endoscopic devices is mandatory to avoid an unacceptably high rate of P. aeruginosa infection.
...
PMID:Septicemia after endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography. 211 May 24
Surgical cholecystostomy is a palliative treatment for
cholecystitis
and distal biliary obstructions when the general condition of the patient does not allow complex techniques. Percutaneous cholecystostomy (PC) guided by ultrasonography is an alternative to that procedure as well as a method of direct access to the biliary tract for diagnostic examinations (bacteriologic study of bile and percutaneous cholangiography). During one year, 9 female patients, mean age 74 (49 to 90) underwent this approach; 5 patients had
cholecystitis
, 2 were suspicious of biliary
sepsis
and 2 had angiocholitis. Because of poor general condition, no other approach was possible in any of the cases. There were no relevant complications. All 5 cases of
cholecystitis
improved after the procedure although 3 patients died within 30 days of causes unrelated to PC. In two cases biliary
sepsis
was ruled, and the probe was withdrawn, without complications. The two patients with angiocholitis improved significantly; in both cases it was shown that the cause was cholelithiasis: later on, they were treated by different methods (endoscopic sphincterotomy in one case and surgery in the third case). These preliminary results suggest that PC guided by echography should be included as a routine therapeutic and diagnostic method in the management of digestive diseases.
...
PMID:[Percutaneous cholecystostomy guided by ultrasonography. A preliminary experience]. 222 50
Acute acalculous cholecystitis is a virulent disease of uncertain etiology observed most commonly in critically ill patients. Although the precise mechanism is unknown, the most commonly postulated theories regarding its pathogenesis are bile stasis,
sepsis
, and ischemia. The role of ischemia in this process, whose etiology is multifactorial, has been difficult to elucidate. Consequently, we report two patients who developed acute acalculous
cholecystitis
without apparent risk for the disease other than severe visceral atherosclerosis. Both patients had symptomatic mesenteric vascular disease requiring revascularization and developed fulminant acalculous
cholecystitis
temporally related to exacerbation of their visceral ischemia. These cases suggest that patients with visceral atherosclerosis may be at increased risk for acute acalculous
cholecystitis
, perhaps due to impaired mucosal resistance when other factors, such as bile statis and
sepsis
, are also present.
...
PMID:Does visceral ischemia play a role in the pathogenesis of acute acalculous cholecystitis? 230 85
Disseminated cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection occurs predominantly in immunocompromised hosts. Symptomatic CMV
cholecystitis
and pancreatitis are quite rare, and, to our knowledge, there are no reports of these occurring simultaneously. We describe a patient with a history of chronic myelogenous leukemia (treated with chemotherapy) who presented with recurrent unexplained fevers and an acute abdomen. At surgery,
cholecystitis
and pancreatitis were found, and a cholecystectomy was performed. The patient developed disseminated intravascular coagulation, eventual
sepsis
, and multiorgan failure. At autopsy, widespread disseminated CMV infection was found, with CMV-associated foci of acute inflammation and necrosis in the pancreas and in the surgically resected gallbladder. A review of our autopsy files revealed only one renal transplant patient with CMV inclusions and chronic pancreatitis. No pancreatitis was seen in 27 patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. Cytomegalovirus should be considered as a possible cause of pancreatitis and
cholecystitis
in immunocompromised patients.
...
PMID:Disseminated cytomegalovirus infection presenting with acalculous cholecystitis and acute pancreatitis. 255 45
Post-transplantation pancreatitis is an infrequent complication with a high risk of mortality. In a 7-year period, there were five patients who had documented pancreatitis out of a total of 488 renal homograft recipients, an incidence of 1 per cent. Two cases occurred in patients with an orthotopic transplant, one of them as a result of surgical injury of the pancreas and the other as a consequence of cytomegalovirus infection. The third case was an acute pancreatitis of hypercalcaemic origin, the fourth patient developed postoperative pancreatitis and acute acalculous
cholecystitis
, and the fifth had acute pancreatitis and
sepsis
associated with cytomegalovirus infection. Three patients died as a direct result of the complication. The mean incidence and mean mortality rate of post-transplantation pancreatitis, as determined from our review of the literature of the last 15 years, are 2.3 and 61.3 per cent, respectively; these are similar to the figures found up to 1970 of 1.7 and 52.2 per cent. A multiplicity of factors present in the uraemic patient may be responsible for the continued frequency of post-transplant pancreatitis despite advances in surgical technique and immunosuppressive therapy.
...
PMID:Acute pancreatitis after renal transplantation. 259 67
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