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

The problem of fungus infections after liver transplantation was studied. In 100 consecutive recipients of orthotopic liver homografts there were 10 and 8 examples, respectively, of localized and disseminated infections caused by Candida species. Candidemia was demonstrated in 8 of these 18 patients. One patient who had a localized Candida infection also had disseminated cryptococcosis. An additional 31 patients were infested in that Candida could be cultured from sites where it is not normally found, such as the blood (8 examples), urine (8), ascitic fluid (8), and wounds (22). This exorbitant incidence of monilial infections and infestations was associated with a high frequency of complications involving the homograft as well as the hosts' gastrointestinal tract during the post-transplantation period. The yeasts found in blood, urine, ascitic fluid and elsewhere were thought to have originated from the gut. Ten of the 100 patients had aspergillosis which was localized in 7 instances and disseminated in 3. The lung was the most frequently affected organ. The fungus infections played a contributory role in the downhill course of our patients but in the event of death more fundamental and more frequent causes of failure were technical complications involving the homografts, difficulties in controlling rejection with reasonable immunosuppressive doses and bacterial sepsis. Suggestions have been made for the better control of fungal infections in liver recipients.
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PMID:Fungus infections after liver transplantation. 32 51

A retrospective review of 149 patients receiving 162 renal transplants showed that 83% of these patients developed one or more infections during a follow-up period averaging one year. In 32 (73%) of 44 deaths, infection was an important contributing cause. In only four (9%) of the deaths were the patients free of infection at the time of death. The Klebsiella-Enterobacter group was the most common agent causing pneumonitis and sepsis. Cryptococcus neoformans caused seven of 11 cases of meningitis. Pseudomonas was the most frequent agent associated with infections documented during postmortem examinations. In a short-term controlled study comparing daily and alternate daily therapy with prednisone, the alternate daily group had significantly (P less than .05) more infections per patient, especially in patients who had no evidence of rejection (P less than .025).
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PMID:Factors affecting the frequency infection in renal transplant recipients. 77 10

In a retrospective study covering the period January 1972 to June 1974, recovery rates of bacteria and of fungi were generally equivalent with tryptic soy broth, Thiol, thioglycolate, and Columbia broth media (all under vacuum with carbon dioxide and sodium polyanetholesulfonate). An additional biphasic medium consisting of brain heart infusion broth and a brain heart infusion agar slant, which was inoculated only where fungal sepsis was suspected clinically, yielded significantly higher recovery rates of fungi. There were 29 instances of cultures with fungi in both the biphasic and broth media, 80 instances of cultures with fungi only in the biphasic medium, and no instances of fungi only in the broth media. The isolates were as follows: Candida albicans, 74; C. parapsilosis, 20; C. tropicalis, 16; Torulopsis glabrata, 18; Torulopsis sp., 1; Cryptococcus neoformans, 12; C. laurentii, 2; and Histoplasma capsulatum, 16. Despite routine subcultures of the broth media to chocolate blood agar within 24 h of inoculation and after 5 days of incubation, detection of fungemia was significantly improved by the use of a biphasic medium.
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PMID:Detection of fungi in blood cultures. 117 6

Four patients with acute paracoccidioidomycosis, hypoalbuminemia, ascites and associated infections are reported. They have been admitted to hospital 35 times, 4 of them due to active paracoccidioidomycosis, 14 to associated infections, 14 to ascites, edema and diarrhoea and 3 to herniorrhaphy. Two of them recovered after sepsis and central nervous system, muscular and subcutaneous cryptococcosis. The remaining two died. One had infectious diarrhoea (S. flexneri), peritoneal tuberculosis and sepsis (S. epidermidis); the other had bacterial meningitis, erysipelas, beta-hemolytic Streptococcus sepsis and miliary tuberculosis. Their immunodeficiency was attributed to enteric protein loss and/or malabsorption and malnutrition and was recognized by reduced response to delayed hypersensitivity skin tests in four patients and hypogammaglobulinemia in three of them. The authors discuss the need for prospective studies to be carried out, aiming at the mechanisms involved in secondary infections. Alternatives for maintaining the patients' adequate nutritional state should be investigated, to guarantee proper immune response and thus the ability to control intervening infections in patients with juvenile paracoccidioidomycosis.
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PMID:Immunodeficiency secondary to juvenile paracoccidioidomycosis: associated infections. 148 Feb 6

Fungal infections are assuming a more prominent role in the sepsis of patients with burns. Torula glabrata (Candida glabrata) is a fungus increasingly found in immunosuppressed patients. This report describes a seriously burned patient who developed a torula infection in the lungs.
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PMID:Torula glabrata: a severe and rare complication in patients suffering from burns. 155 84

In the immunocompromised patient, even mild forms of any combination of headache, meningismus, altered mental status, or focal neurologic signs should initiate an evaluation for possible CNS infection. The limited signs and symptoms of acute CNS infection are not due to specific organisms but to pathologic changes at the neuroanatomic site of infection. The initial clinical history, examination, laboratory, and neuroradiographic data will narrow the problem to one of several groups of agents, although it may not be possible to specify a single causative agent. It should be remembered that several concurrent infections (i.e., CMV and toxoplasmosis, aspergillosis, and bacterial sepsis) may be present. Thus, the clinician should rely on broad antibiotic coverage appropriate to the suspected causative agent or agents at the site of infection. It may be necessary to offer broad-spectrum antibiotic coverage for a CSF presentation that is subsequently found to result from a viral illness or from a noninfectious cause. However, one should avoid undertreating those infections for which specific therapy can be offered, and broad-spectrum treatment usually will not be regretted. Uncertainty in diagnosis following noninvasive procedures should lead to a brain biopsy. Although many of the infections discussed in this article have a poor prognosis, some of the most common pathogens, such as Cryptococcus, Listeria, and Toxoplasma, have effective specific therapies to which the patient should have access as rapidly as possible. The clinician who has successfully treated a patient with CNS infection should remain vigilant for late sequelae or recurrence of infection. Chronic treatment of some infections, such as toxoplasmosis or aspergillosis, may be necessary. The reintroduction of steroids for the treatment of an underlying cancer may reactivate previously treated disease, such as cryptococcosis, and periodic CSF surveillance is appropriate under these circumstances. Recurrence of the symptoms should raise the suspicion of recurrent or new infection, and the patient also should be evaluated with CT or MRI for the development of hydrocephalus or for new metastatic disease. In patients who have had varicella-zoster infection, postherpetic neuralgia and delayed arteritis may develop. Seizures, hearing loss, and neuropsychologic sequelae may follow any meningoencephalitis. The patient should always be reevaluated for the possibility of infection with a different opportunistic organism. CNS infections remain a major cause of morbidity and mortality in immunosuppressed patients with malignancies. In one series, 60% of such patients died as a result of their CNS infection, many at a time when the underlying disease had an otherwise good prognosis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Central nervous system infections in cancer patients. 175 29

Among patients examined at the Central Laboratory of Yokohama City University Hospital over the 25 years from 1965 to 1989, those whose clinical samples showed Cryptococcus were studied in greater detail. The following findings were obtained. Of 16 patients who were found to have cryptococcosis, 14 (87.5%) were treated at the department of internal medicine, and one each at the departments of neurosurgery and dermatology. A study of these patients in terms of clinical type revealed 10 patients (62.5%) with meningitis, two with pneumonia and one with sepsis. The remaining three patients had complicated diseases: meningitis with sepsis, pneumonia with cutaneous cryptococcosis, or pleuritis with sepsis. Underlying disease, including liver cirrhosis, leukemia, multiple myeloma, malignant lymphoma and collagen disease, was found in 6 patients (37.5%), who were all from the department of internal medicine. All patients but one were given antimycotic agents. They were treated by a combination therapy except for three patients who received single amphotericin B (AMPH) therapy. The most frequent combination was AMPH + 5-flucytosine (5-FC), which was found in 7 cases. Seven patients (43.4%) died, three males and four females. Analysis of these cases in terms of clinical type revealed meningitis in four, and pneumonia, sepsis, or pleuritis complicated with sepsis in the remaining three patients. Four patients (57.1%) had underlying diseases. In addition, eleven strains isolated from the specimens were examined for serotypes and minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) using three types of antimycotic agents. Serotypes of Cryptococcus neoformans were all A and the MIC was 0.1-0.39 micrograms/ml for AMPH, 0.05-0.2 micrograms/ml for 5-FC and 0.2-0.78 micrograms/ml for miconazole (MCZ).
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PMID:[Mycological and clinical study of cryptococcosis in Yokohama City University Hospital during the period from 1965 to 1989]. 207 57

Capsule-deficient Cryptococcus neoformans (CN-CD) infection is very rare. The authors recently experienced the case of CN-CD infection with the complication of the syndrome of inappropriate antidiuretic hormone secretion (SIADH) in a 83 year old woman. She was admitted to our hospital with the complaints of fever and general fatigue on June 10, 1987. At the time of admission, there were no abnormal findings except a mildly lowered consciousness level on physical examination, there were no abnormal neurological finding nor meningeal signs. Laboratory data revealed a mild leukocytosis and hyponatremia. Chest X-P showed a few small nodular shadows scattered in both lungs. Antibiotics therapy was of no help and hyponatremia became worse. Then with the suspicion of SIADH, Demeclocycline was administered and limitation of water intake was decreased and hyponatremia improvement was used. Yeast-like fungi was detected in the venous blood culture and in the cerebrospinal fluid (cell count: 252/3) CN-CD by India-ink preparation and bacteriological nature were determined. We made a diagnosis of sepsis and meningitis by CN-CD accompanied with SIADH. In spite of Miconazole administration intravenously and intrathecally, she died 2 months after admission. The minimal inhibitory concentration (micrograms/ml) of antibiotics against the isolated CN-CD was as follows: Amphotericin B: 0.78, 5-PC: 1.56, Miconazole less than or equal to 0.05, Nystatin: 25, Ketoconazole: 0.78.
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PMID:[A case of sepsis and meningitis due to capsule-deficient Cryptococcus neoformans with SIADH]. 269 39

We report seven elderly patients with COPD who developed serious infectious complications during prolonged treatment with high doses of corticosteroids. Infections included invasive pulmonary aspergillosis, Herpes simplex stomatitis and esophagitis, cytomegalovirus pneumonia, bacterial sepsis, fungemia and meningitis due to Cryptococcus neoformans. Each of the three patients who developed invasive aspergillus pneumonia died. The efficacy of prolonged therapy with high doses of corticosteroids in patients with COPD is not proven. These cases illustrate the potential for serious infections in patients with COPD treated with corticosteroids.
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PMID:Serious infectious complications of corticosteroid therapy for COPD. 272 Dec 49

Systemic infection with Cryptococcosis neoformans is described in a young man receiving maintenance haemodialysis. The organism was identified in thin sections of a cervical lymph node using resin embedding and silver staining. There were no predisposing factors other than uraemia. His clinical infection responded to the combination of oral 5-flucytosine and a total of 2.5 g of intravenous amphotericin B. He remains free of relapse after 30 months.
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PMID:Disseminated cryptococcosis in a patient receiving chronic haemodialysis. 389 55


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