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Query: UMLS:C0243026 (
sepsis
)
52,417
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Nineteen patients (11 women and eight men) aged 20-68 received long-term parenteral nutrition, mostly at home, for six to 63 months (mean 19 months). Indications for LTPN were extensive, active
Crohn's disease
in three patients, intestinocutaneous fistulas in three, and short-bowel syndrome in the remaining 13 patients. Subclavian or intra-atrial (Broviac) catheters were most commonly used, for which the average life was four and seven months respectively. Complications of long-term parenteral nutrition included pneumothorax in four out of 48 subclavian vein punctures. Catheter-induced thrombosis of central veins was shown by phlebography 17 times in nine patients, and eight episodes of total occlusion occurred. Two of these patients had pulmonary infarction. Nineteen episodes of catheter
sepsis
occurred in 11 patients, but only one was fatal. Complications related to intestinal disease included intra-abdominal abscesses and intestinal fistulas, and disturbances of liver function. Five patients died, though in only two was death related to long-term parenteral nutrition. One of these patients died from catheter
sepsis
, the other had subdural haematoma possibly caused by anticoagulant treatment. Eight of the 14 surviving patients still needed parenteral nutrition. All received a disability pension, but six had an acceptable quality of life with almost normal social activities.Despite problems such as difficulties in maintaining standardised infusion programmes, it was concluded that long-term parenteral nutrition at home is practicable and consistent with an acceptable quality of life.
...
PMID:Long-term parenteral nutrition. 9 99
A consecutive series of 25 patients who developed external small bowel fistula within 2 weeks of abdominal surgery is described. Half the patients had a primary diagnosis of inflammatory bowel disease and the fistula arose usually as a result of direct trauma to the bowel or the breakdown of an anastomosis. All the patients were treated conservatively with total bowel rest and intravenous hyperalimentation. In 15 (60 per cent) spontaneous fistula closure occurred, in an average period of 32 days. In 8 patients the fistula failed to close and surgery was performed, but was effective in only 3 cases. Thus the fistula eventually closed in 18 patients. Five patients died, all from intra-abdominal
sepsis
. Of the 8 patients with a primary diagnosis of
Crohn's disease
, 3 died, 2 have a persistent fistula, 1 has a permanent ileostomy and spontaneous closure occurred in only 2.
...
PMID:Postoperative external small bowel fistulas: a study of a consecutive series of patients treated with intravenous hyperalimentation. 10 92
Seventeen pediatric patients, ages 9.25--20.5 yr, were placed on a program of home parenteral nutrition (HPN) for severe, symptomatic
Crohn's disease
. Prior therapy with sulfasalazine in 14, adrenocorticosteroids in 12, inpatient total parenteral nutrition in 7, and/or surgical resections in 6 failed to suppress disease activity. Remission was attained in 12 of the 17 after one course of HPN alone. Four patients had surgical procedures and 1 required steroids in addition to HPN. Remissions have been maintained in 4 of those 12 for a mean duration of 315 days after discontinuation of HPN. Of the 8 who relapsed after a mean duration of 68 days, second courses of HPN were undertaken in 7 and third courses in 2. All 17 had a marked improvement in disease symptoms while receiving HPN in addition to gaining weight sufficient to place them at a higher percentile on standard growth charts. Ten patients demonstrated "catch-up" growth and 4 others increased their height appropriately. A chromium 51-labeled albumin stool collection of greater than 1% in 5 of 7 patients at the completion of a HPN course correlated with relapse within 4 mo. Serial radiographic contrast studies and erythrocyte sedimentation rates were not predictive of prolonged remissions. Home parenteral nutrition complications were minimal, with only one episode of
sepsis
per 5.8 catheter experience years. It is concluded that HPN is a safe and effective means of inducing remissions and providing optimal nutritional support in pediatric patients with severe
Crohn's disease
. Patients with less than adequate response to standard medical management should be considered candidates for this therapeutic modality.
...
PMID:Home parenteral nutrition in children with Crohn's disease: an effective management alternative. 10 47
In a group of 160 patients with
Crohn's disease
involving the colon, there were seven patients with toxic dilatation, four with granulomatous colitis and three with ileocolitis, all successfully treated without mortality. This complications is more common than previously recognized in Crohn's colitis. In
Crohn's disease
, toxic dilatation is less likely to proceed to perforation of the bowel, because of the nature of the pathology and is more likely to respond to conservative measures: intubation, with decompression, corticotropin, steroids and high-dose antibiotic administration. Although patients do recover from this life-threatening complication with conservative management, the majority of patients, if not all, will ultimately come to surgical excision of the colon. If surgery is mandatory, it should be carried out early, rather than late, in the patient who is failing to respond to medical therapy, certainly before the development of perforation, massive hemorrhage, or gram negative
sepsis
with shock. The surgical therapy will depend upon the state of the bowel at laparotomy. Thus, an intact bowel in a young patient, would favor subtotal colectomy or proctocolectomy; a sealed perforation, a diverting ileostomy with skin level colostomy decompression as suggested by Turnbull and a free perforation, the minimum adequate procedure which will tide the patient over the early postoperative period. Diverting ileostomy alone has been effective in two of our patients but should be avoided in ulcerative colitis. The critically ill patient with the ominous finding of "disintegrating colitis" and multiple leaks, will require nothing less than total radical excision of the diseased bowel in the hope of immediate salvage.
...
PMID:Crohn's disease of the colon. III. Toxic dilatation of the colon in Crohn's colitis. 16 16
A retrospective analysis was undertaken of the records of 107 patients with
Crohn's disease
of the colon or with ulcerative colitis who underwent 162 operations under steroid cover. The study revealed no correlation between steroid dosage and postoperative morbidity or mortality. The incidence of wound dehiscence and incisional hernia compared favourably with the reports of other unselected series of similar patients. Contamination did significantly influence results. Septic complications were more frequent when the operative field was contaminated and both delayed wound healing and mortality were related to this
sepsis
. A ;clean and dirty' technique was effective in controlling contamination during elective bowel division but preoperative bowel perforation and accidental entry into the lumen of the bowel during dissection were potentially avoidable sources of contamination. Primary healing of the perineal wound after proctocolectomy was seldom achieved in contaminated patients where a drain tube was brought out through the main perineal incision. When perineal sinuses or fistulae followed a proctocolectomy, patients with
Crohn's disease
had a significantly slower rate of healing than did patients with ulcerative colitis. However, there was no difference in the healing of abdominal wounds in relation to the primary pathology. Even abdominal incisions which were used on more than one occasion healed as well as those which were used for the first time. A prophylactic antibiotic regime of either ampicillin or tetracycline offered little protection against postoperative
sepsis
. The organisms which caused such infections were often insensitive to the two antibiotics.
...
PMID:Factors which influenced postoperative complications in patients with ulcerative colitis or Crohn's disease of the colon on corticosteroids. 68 Jun 5
We analyzed the course of 186 patients with external gastrointestinal fistulas treated at the University of California Medical Center, San Francisco from 1968 to 1977. There were 82 patients in the earlier group (1968-1971) and 104 patients in the later group (1972-1977). The groups differed in that 35% of patients in the earlier group received TPN, but 71% of patients in the later group received TPN. Of the patients who did not receive TPN, 93% had been adequately nourished using tube feeding methods. The two groups were otherwise similar. The fistula-related mortality (11%) and the spontaneous closure rate of the fistulas (32%) was unchanged over the ten year period. Thus, the principal impact of TPN was to simplify the nutritional management rather than to alter the outcome. When malignancy, previous abdominal irradiation,
Crohn's disease
, or a short (<2 cm) fistula tract were present, spontaneous closure was less likely than when none of these factors were present (20% versus 47%). Sixty-eight per cent of the deaths occurred in patients with uncontrolled
sepsis
. Fifty per cent of the deaths were due to the primary disease and were unrelated to the fistula. Spontaneous closure could not be expected to start until
sepsis
was controlled. Because over 90% of patients whose fistulas closed spontaneously did so within one month after infection was eradicated, we recommend operative closure for most fistulas that persist beyond that time. The most reliable operation is excision of the bowel from which the fistula arises with end-to-end anastomosis. Fistulas not amenable to excision should be managed by bypass.
...
PMID:Management of external gastrointestinal fistulas. 69 30
Between 1965 and 1975, 27 patients underwent surgical treatment for ileosigmoidal fistulas complicating
Crohn's disease
at the Cleveland Clinic. There was no death and no anastomotic leak. The preferred procedure is resection of the ileocecal area involved by
Crohn's disease
with ileocolic anastomosis and a separate segmental resection of the sigmoid colon with colocolic anastomosis. A covering temporary loop ileostomy is used when there is associated pelvic
sepsis
or small-bowel obstruction.
...
PMID:The dilemma of Crohn's disease: ileosigmoidal fistula complicating Crohn's disease. 87 7
Portal vein thrombosis is a rare complication of ulcerative colitis and is invariably fatal. This report describes a patient with severe
Crohn's disease
who underwent elective surgery complicated by an anastomotic disruption with faecal peritonitis. Following emergency laparotomy he developed left hypochondrial pain which was a manifestation of splenomegaly consequent upon portal vein thrombosis. Anticoagulation was successful in preventing further spread of the thrombosis as monitored by colour Doppler ultrasound. Severe active disease, surgery and
sepsis
have been recognized as predisposing factors for thromboembolic complications in inflammatory bowel disease and this patient was exposed to all three. It is conceivable that portal vein thromboses occur more commonly than suspected and ultrasound scanning could ascertain the prevalence if performed prospectively.
...
PMID:Portal vein thrombosis in a complicated case of Crohn's disease. 140 98
We reviewed 46 consecutive patients with
Crohn's disease
predominantly affecting the ileum who specifically underwent right-sided ileocolectomy with primary anastomosis. All had a primary ileocolic anastomosis done by suture in a single-layer closed fashion. Of these 46 patients, 19.6% had overt intra-abdominal
sepsis
, 30.4% had prior surgery, and 95.7% were taking corticosteroid drugs just before their operation. The mean (+/- SE) age was 31.5 +/- 2.0 years. The serum albumin level was less than 35 g/L in 93.5% of patients; all had a hematocrit value less than 0.36, and 80.4% lost more than 15% of their normal body weight. No patient received parenteral nutrition either preoperatively or postoperatively. No change in the preoperative, intraoperative, or postoperative approach to treating patients with predominantly ileal
Crohn's disease
occurred during the 10-year period of review. There was a 2.2% incidence of perioperative complications (one superficial wound infection) and a 6.5% incidence of late (>1.49 months) complications (two suture sinuses and one wound abscess unassociated with a fistula). Our findings suggest that preoperative parenteral nutrition is unnecessary in the majority of patients with predominantly ileal
Crohn's disease
specifically undergoing right-sided ileocolectomy and primary ileocolic anastomosis.
...
PMID:Is preoperative parenteral nutrition necessary for patients with predominantly ileal Crohn's disease? 141 87
184 patients diagnosed with
Crohn's disease
were observed for an average of 5 years and evaluated for clinical pattern and course of disease. The male/female ratio was almost equal (90 m. vs. 94 f.). The peak of disease manifestation was between years 18-32. Familial clustering of inflammatory bowel disease was observed in 2.2%. The pattern of anatomic involvement was ileocolic in 53%, colon in 24%, small bowel in 20% and other locations in 3%. 34% of patients were afflicted with at least one extraintestinal manifestation, 34% developed fistulae. Fistula formation was seen more often in colon involvement than small bowel involvement (69% vs. 32%). 48% of the patients were operated at least once. 3 patients died during the observation period, 2 of them with
sepsis
. Evolution of carcinoma was not observed. Some of our results are in accordance with the literature, some distinct observations (e.g. low familial clustering) underline the theory of a multifactorial pathogenesis in
Crohn's disease
.
...
PMID:[Long-term follow-up of Crohn disease]. 150 84
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