Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0243026 (sepsis)
52,417 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The authors report a case of refractory non-infectious circulatory shock with catecholamine and massive fluid loading-resistant features related to hypopituitarism. A 76-year-old man was admitted for shock after suffering from gastroenteritis for 3 days. He was pale and had sparse axillary and pubic hair and small testes. Right catheterization showed shock with low preload pressure and a low oxygen extraction ratio relevant for septic shock. Ultrasound tomography revealed a distended gallbladder due to a stone without peritoneal effusion. A non-inflammatory hydrops of the gallbladder was removed surgically. No microorganism was isolated. Cerebral computed tomography (CT) scan showed a pituitary mass. In the post-surgical period the shock became uncontrollable. Cortisol replacement therapy was instituted and clinical and hemodynamic improvement occurred after 2 h. Hormonal screening on admission before catecholamine administration showed a major decrease in all the hypothalamic-pituitary hormone concentrations. The patient died on day 15 with multiple organ failure. Hypopituitarism, probably owing to pituitary adenoma, was the only disease identified in this case. Hormone replacement therapy dramatically improved the clinical and hemodynamic status, although the role of an abdominal sepsis could not be eliminated. Arguments that pituitary hormone deficiency might increase the hemodynamic consequences of adrenal deficiency are discussed.
...
PMID:Severe non-infectious circulatory shock related to hypopituitarism. 1044 49

Acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) is the result of severe injuries of different etiologies of the capillary system in patients with previously healthy lungs, resulting in noncardiogenic pulmonary edema. The authors studied 42 infants in whom the histopathologic aspects were suggestive for ARDS. The etiologic factors of this syndrome were: severe gastroenteritis with hypovolemic or endotoxic shock (13 cases), sepsis (9 cases), fulminans purpura (2 cases), severe neurological disorders (13 cases), pulmonary infections (5 cases). In such conditions, if the infant presents hyperpnea followed by generalised cyanosis, refractory to oxygen therapy, and if there are clinical and radiologic signs of acute pulmonary edema, the diagnosis of ARDS must be considered and a complete intensive care therapy is compulsory in order to alleviate the severe prognosis of this syndrome.
...
PMID:Etiological, clinical and pathomorphological aspects of acute respiratory distress syndrome in children. 1075 53

We undertook a retrospective study of the risk factors determining outcome of nontraumatic patients with shock in the pediatric emergency service. From October 1992 through September 1997, 22 patients with the diagnosis of shock were identified, including 11 with septic shock (50%), 7 with hypovolemic shock (32%) and 4 with cardiogenic shock (18%). Their age ranged from 2 months to 19 years old. Among the cases, 14 patients (64%) had other underlying diseases. Gram-negative bacterial sepsis (6/11, 55%), dilated cardiomyopathy (2/4, 50%) and acute gastroenteritis (7/7, 100%) were the most frequent causes of septic, cardiogenic and hypovolemic shock, respectively. In total, 12 patients (55%) died. The mortality rate was high in septic shock (9/11, 82%) and cardiogenic shock patients (3/4, 75%), but low in hypovolemic shock patients (0/7, 0%). The risk factors of poor outcome in patients with shock included thrombocytopenia, prolonged prothrombin time and partial thromboplastin time. Patients with leukopenia, a higher level of C-reactive protein, or under 2 years of age tended to have poor outcome.
...
PMID:Shock in the pediatric emergency service: five years' experience. 1091 May 75

Listeria monocytogenes causes sepsis and meningitis in immunocompromised hosts and a devastating maternal/fetal infection in pregnant women. In recent years a more benign gastroenteritis in normal hosts has been described. Listeria has been increasingly identified as a food-borne pathogen, and large-scale contamination of processed foods with resulting outbreaks has occurred in recent years, possibly as a result of consolidation of the food industry. Experimental listeriosis in mice has proven to be an extraordinarily useful model for analyzing cell-mediated immune host defenses. Contrary to original concepts, we found that neutrophils, not macrophages, are the prime effectors during early infection. CD8+ T cells are then responsible for lysing infected hepatocytes through perforin-related (early primary and secondary infection) or Fas-L/Fas mechanism (late primary). Of interest, non-classical MHC class Ib restricted recognition mechanisms exist early, whereas MHC class Ia mechanisms can be detected throughout infection.
...
PMID:An updated model of cell-mediated immunity--listeriosis: clinical and research aspects. 1095 86

Listeria monocytogenes emerged as an important foodborne pathogen in the latter part of the 20th century. Clinical syndromes caused by this microorganism include sepsis in the immunocompromised patient, meningoencephalitis in infants and adults, and febrile gastroenteritis. Focal infections at other sites are less frequent. Listeria species are commonly found in raw and unprocessed food products. Major outbreaks of listeriosis, with high morbidity and mortality, have been caused by a variety of foods, including soft cheeses, delicatessen meats, and vegetable products. Improved detection methods, dietary recommendations, and, in some cases, preemptive antibiotic treatment or prophylaxis have reduced the incidence of sporadic listeriosis infections in the United States. Microbial virulence factors distinguishing environmental strains of L. monocytogenes from invasive strains causing foodborne illness and host factors promoting human infection remain incompletely understood.
...
PMID:Foodborne listeriosis. 1131 60

Infection with Echovirus 11 is mostly asymptomatic, but it may cause a wide variety of clinical diseases, from gastroenteritis to serious diseases such as meningitis and myocarditis. In small infants, especially during the first days of life, echovirus infection may appear as a sepsis-like illness, and cause disseminated intravascular coagulopathy and shock. We present 2 infants with severe Echovirus 11 infections. A 3.5-month-old died within 24 hours of shock and probably myocarditis. The other, 6-days old, presented with meningitis, hepatitis and disseminated intravascular coagulopathy. It recovered after treatment with intravenous immunoglobulin. Echovirus 11 may cause life-threatening infections in small infants. Pediatricians should be alert to the special characteristics of this disease.
...
PMID:[Life-threatening echovirus 11 infection during first month of life]. 1106 68

The gram-positive bacterium Listeria monocytogenes is the causative agent of listeriosis, a highly fatal opportunistic foodborne infection. Pregnant women, neonates, the elderly, and debilitated or immunocompromised patients in general are predominantly affected, although the disease can also develop in normal individuals. Clinical manifestations of invasive listeriosis are usually severe and include abortion, sepsis, and meningoencephalitis. Listeriosis can also manifest as a febrile gastroenteritis syndrome. In addition to humans, L. monocytogenes affects many vertebrate species, including birds. Listeria ivanovii, a second pathogenic species of the genus, is specific for ruminants. Our current view of the pathophysiology of listeriosis derives largely from studies with the mouse infection model. Pathogenic listeriae enter the host primarily through the intestine. The liver is thought to be their first target organ after intestinal translocation. In the liver, listeriae actively multiply until the infection is controlled by a cell-mediated immune response. This initial, subclinical step of listeriosis is thought to be common due to the frequent presence of pathogenic L. monocytogenes in food. In normal individuals, the continual exposure to listerial antigens probably contributes to the maintenance of anti-Listeria memory T cells. However, in debilitated and immunocompromised patients, the unrestricted proliferation of listeriae in the liver may result in prolonged low-level bacteremia, leading to invasion of the preferred secondary target organs (the brain and the gravid uterus) and to overt clinical disease. L. monocytogenes and L. ivanovii are facultative intracellular parasites able to survive in macrophages and to invade a variety of normally nonphagocytic cells, such as epithelial cells, hepatocytes, and endothelial cells. In all these cell types, pathogenic listeriae go through an intracellular life cycle involving early escape from the phagocytic vacuole, rapid intracytoplasmic multiplication, bacterially induced actin-based motility, and direct spread to neighboring cells, in which they reinitiate the cycle. In this way, listeriae disseminate in host tissues sheltered from the humoral arm of the immune system. Over the last 15 years, a number of virulence factors involved in key steps of this intracellular life cycle have been identified. This review describes in detail the molecular determinants of Listeria virulence and their mechanism of action and summarizes the current knowledge on the pathophysiology of listeriosis and the cell biology and host cell responses to Listeria infection. This article provides an updated perspective of the development of our understanding of Listeria pathogenesis from the first molecular genetic analyses of virulence mechanisms reported in 1985 until the start of the genomic era of Listeria research.
...
PMID:Listeria pathogenesis and molecular virulence determinants. 1143 15

Opinions on antibiotic treatment of salmonella gastroenteritis are still different. Many authors support an opinion that antimicrobial treatment has no effect on salmonella elimination. The authors of the study have tried to prove that fluoroquinolones shorten the elimination of salmonellae and therefore they are useful not only for the treatment of salmonella gastroenteritis in immunocompromised patients to prevent sepsis and extraintestinal manifestations of the infection, but also for eradication of salmonellae in food industry workers, whose carrier state might exclude them from their work. (Tab. 3, Ref. 10.)
...
PMID:Eradicative effect of cotrimoxazole and quinolones on non-typhoid salmonellae. 1176 69

Ciguatera poisoning, a toxinological syndrome comprising an enigmatic mixture of gastrointestinal, neurocutaneous and constitutional symptoms, is a common food-borne illness related to contaminated fish consumption. As many as 50000 cases worldwide are reported annually, and the condition is endemic in tropical and subtropical regions of the Pacific Basin, Indian Ocean and Caribbean. Isolated outbreaks occur sporadically but with increasing frequency in temperate areas such as Europe and North America. Increase in travel between temperate countries and endemic areas and importation of susceptible fish has led to its encroachment into regions of the world where ciguatera has previously been rarely encountered. In the developed world, ciguatera poses a public health threat due to delayed or missed diagnosis. Ciguatera is frequently encountered in Australia. Sporadic cases are often misdiagnosed or not medically attended to, leading to persistent or recurrent debilitating symptoms lasting months to years. Without treatment, distinctive neurologic symptoms persist, occasionally being mistaken for multiple sclerosis. Constitutional symptoms may be misdiagnosed as chronic fatigue syndrome. A common source outbreak is easier to recognize and therefore notify to public health organizations. We present a case series of four adult tourists who developed ciguatera poisoning after consuming contaminated fish in Vanuatu. All responded well to intravenous mannitol. This is in contrast to a fifth patient who developed symptoms suggestive of ciguatoxicity in the same week as the index cases but actually had staphylococcal endocarditis with bacteraemia. In addition to a lack of response to mannitol, clinical and laboratory indices of sepsis were present in this patient. Apart from ciguatera, acute gastroenteritis followed by neurological symptoms may be due to paralytic or neurotoxic shellfish poisoning, scombroid and pufferfish toxicity, botulism, enterovirus 71, toxidromes and bacteraemia. Clinical aspects of ciguatera toxicity, its pathophysiology, diagnostic difficulties and epidemiology are discussed.
...
PMID:Ciguatera poisoning: a global issue with common management problems. 1178 97

A prospective study was carried out on 210 cases of children under 10 years of age with fever. Cases of gastroenteritis, respiratory tract infections, and suspected sepsis in children seen or admitted to the pediatric hospital were studied. Clinical and microbiological data were recorded in a questionnaire or obtained from patient medical records. Most of the children with septicemia (71.3 per cent) were less than 1 year old. Focal source of bacteremia was gastroenteritis (40.4 per cent), pneumonia or bronchopneumonia (20 per cent), meningitis (7.4 per cent), and urinary tract infections (7.4 per cent). The predominant pathogens isolated from blood or stool specimens were gram-positive bacteria (53.3 per cent), mainly Streptococcus pneumoniae and coagulase-negative Staphylococcus spp. The gram-negative bacteria (45.6 per cent) were mainly Escherichia coli, Klebsiella pneumoniae, Haemophilus influenzae, Neisseria meningitidis, and Yersinia spp. One case of Candida albicans (1.1 per cent) was reported. Pasteurella pneumotropica was reported in two cases for the first time. The mortality rate was 4 per cent, mostly from septicemia cases. Long duration of hospitalization (> 10 days) and parenteral feeding were identified as risk factors. Resistance of the isolated pathogens to several commonly used antibiotics was observed. Empirical treatment with antibiotics is recommended only in life-threatening cases.
...
PMID:Bacteremia in children: etiologic agents, focal sites, and risk factors. 1182 4


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>