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)

It seems that with climatic and geoecologic changes, Hantaviruses have re-emerged as human pathogens related to increases in interaction between humans and rodent reservoirs. Infection with SNV in North America and the Andes virus in South America can produce infection manifest initially as a flu-like illness. In the setting of a history of possible exposure to rodents or their excreta, clinical symptoms and laboratory clues such as thrombocytopenia should raise the suspicion of HPS. Clinical deterioration can be rapid, so patients should be hospitalized and transported to tertiary care centers where mechanical ventilation is available if necessary. Presumptive treatment for other forms of sepsis should be considered before confirmation of diagnosis. Survival seems to be determined in part by viral and host factors. Canadian and South American data suggest that there may be species variations influencing clinical manifestations and course of disease. Because the pathogenesis seems to be based on immunologic injury, future treatments will likely focus on interventions other than antiviral medications. Prevention strategies should be emphasized, particularly when recognized climatic conditions favor rodent abundance. Physicians should remain alert to the possibility of such a diagnosis when evaluating a patient with CAP and should request appropriate serology while supporting the patient in a closely monitored setting. The declining mortality rates seen over the past decade may be a consequence of improved medical management or better recognition of cases, including those less severe than originally described.
...
PMID:Community-acquired pneumonia: new facets of an old disease--Hantavirus pulmonary syndrome. 1576 21

Epidemiological surveillance in Navarre (584,734 inhabitants) covers 34 transmissible diseases, whose notification is compulsory, and epidemic outbreaks of any aetiology. Notification is carried out on a weekly basis by the doctors from paediatrics, primary care and specialised care. In 2004, 75.8% of all the possible notification reports (a weekly report for each doctor) were received, a percentage that has improved in the last five year period. Flu only reached 14.4 cases per 1,000 inhabitants (Epidemic Index, EI: 0.30), due to the advance of the epidemic peak for the 2003-2004 season to the month of November. The rate of respiratory tuberculosis fell to 11.6 cases per 100,000 inhabitants, and the rate of non-respiratory tuberculosis rose to 2.7 per 100,000. Ten cases of tuberculosis (11.9%) were grouped into four outbreaks that affected adolescents and young adults. Thirty percent of the cases were produced in immigrants and 4.8% in persons coinfected with HIV, proportions that are similar to those of the previous year. Eleven cases of meningococcal disease were reported, (1.9 cases per 100,000 inhabitants; EI 0.73), but only in 8 cases was the clinical form sepsis and/or meningitis. Neisseria meningitidis serogroup B was isolated in 8 cases, and serogroup C in 2 cases, the latter 2 were adults and were not vaccinated. The incidence of immunopreventable diseases continues to fall, and for the fifth consecutive year no case of measles has been reported. Legionnaire's disease, which is detected through the systematic determination of the antigen in urine, rose to 5.8 cases per 100,000 inhabitants (EI: 1.42), without any epidemiological relation between them. The incidence of imported diseases rose, with 12 cases of malaria, 8 of shigellosis, 5 of hepatitis A and 2 of legionnaire's disease acquired outside Spain.
...
PMID:[Communicable disease surveillance in Navarre, 2004]. 1582 82

The most frequent infectious disease as in the previous years was influenza. 1,216,285 cases were reported (3,184.4/100,000). Number of foodborne infections and intoxications remains high--20,221 cases (52.9/100,000). 81.6% of them were caused by Salmonella. In 15.5% of them etiologic factor was not found. In this number Campylobacter infections, rarely tested in Poland may be hidden. Especially alarming is number of cases of diarrhea among children 0-2. Seasonality of childhood diarrhea indicates domination of viral infections, most probably rotaviral among them. There was noted decrease of incidence of newly diagnosed cases of viral hepatitis B (4.7/100,000) which dropped to the level of the incidence of viral hepatitis C (5.9/100,000). Hepatitis A remains at the low level (0.39/100,000). Level of newly diagnosed cases of AIDS (116 cases, 0.36/100,000) remains relatively stable for last few years. The major problem is decreasing reporting of possible risk factors. Infectious diseases caused 0.75% of deaths. Mortality from infectious diseases was 7.2/100,000 and was significantly higher among men (9.5) then among women (5.0). In urban settings mortality from infectious diseases was higher (7.3/100,000) then in the country (6.9). As in previous years, the highest number of deaths was caused by tuberculosis and its late sequels (34.4%). Attention should be given to the increased number of deaths due to sepsis (32.3%, without neonatal sepsis).
...
PMID:[Infectious diseases in Poland in 2003]. 1619 May 20

Endotoxin administration to animals and humans is an accepted experimental model of Gram-negative sepsis, and endotoxin is believed to play a major role in triggering the activation of cytokines. In septic patients, the IL-12/IL-18/IFN-gamma axis is activated and correlates with mortality. Our aim was to investigate the effects of endotoxin administration in humans on the activation of the IL-12/IL-18/IFN-gamma axis. Seven healthy volunteers received E. coli endotoxin (O:113). Hemodynamics, temperature and the course of plasma concentrations of TNF-alpha, IL-1beta, IL-12, IL-18 and IFN-gamma were determined. Endotoxin administration resulted in the expected flu-like symptoms, a temperature of 38.8 +/- 0.3(o)C (p < 0.003), a decrease in mean arterial blood pressure of 14.8 +/- 1.8 mmHg (p < 0.0002) and an increase in heart rate of 27.5 +/- 4.8 bpm (p < 0.002) compared to baseline values. TNF-alpha increased from 16.6 +/- 8.2 to 927 +/- 187 pg/mL (p < 0.003). IL-1beta increased from 8.6 +/- 0.5 to 25.3 +/- 2.0 pg/mL (p < 0.0001). IL-12 showed no significant increase (8.2 +/- 0.2 to 9.3 +/- 0.8 pg/mL, p = 0.13), and all IL-18 measurements remained below the level of detection. In contrast, IFN-gamma showed an increase from 106.6 +/- 57.1 to 152.7 +/- 57.8 (p < 0.005). These results indicate that pathways other than the IL-12/IL-18 axis may induce IFN-gamma production in human endotoxemia.
...
PMID:IFN-gamma is not induced through increased plasma concentrations of interleukin-12/interleukin-18 during human endotoxemia. 1626 58

Children born without a spleen or who have impaired splenic function, due to disease or splenectomy, are at significantly increased risk of life-threatening bacterial sepsis. The mainstays of prevention are education, immunization, and prophylactic antibiotics. The availability of conjugate 7-valent pneumococcal vaccines for use in children to age 9 years at least, as well as conjugate meningococcal C vaccine in some countries, for use beginning in infancy, appear to represent beneficial additions, but not substitutions, to previous recommendations for the use of polysaccharide 23-valent pneumococcal and quadrivalent A, C, Y, W-135 vaccines. Routine immunization against H. influenzae type b should continue with non-immunized children older than age 5 years receiving two doses 2 months apart, similar to children who have not previously received conjugate pneumococcal vaccine in infancy. Annual influenza immunization, which reduces the risk of secondary bacterial infection, is also recommended for asplenic children and their household contacts. Many experts continue prophylaxis indefinitely although prophylaxis of the penicillin allergic child remains suboptimal.
...
PMID:The prevention and treatment of bacterial infections in children with asplenia or hyposplenia: practice considerations at the Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto. 1633 16

Although activation of Toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4)-positive cells is essential for eliminating Gram-negative bacteria, overactivation of these cells by the TLR4 ligand LPS initiates a systemic inflammatory reaction and shock. Here we demonstrate that SPRET/Ei mice, derived from Mus spretus, exhibit a dominant resistance against LPS-induced lethality. This resistance is mediated by bone marrow-derived cells. Macrophages from these mice exhibit normal signaling and gene expression responses that depend on the myeloid differentiation factor 88 adaptor protein, but they are impaired in IFN-beta production. The defect appears to be specific for IFN-beta, although the SPRET/Ei IFN-beta promoter is normal. In vivo IFN-beta induction by LPS or influenza virus is very low in SPRET/Ei mice, but IFN-beta-treatment restores the sensitivity to LPS, and IFN type 1 receptor-deficient mice are also resistant to LPS. Because of the defective induction of IFN-beta, these mice are completely resistant to Listeria monocytogenes and highly sensitive to Leishmania major infection. Stimulation of SPRET/Ei macrophages leads to rapid down-regulation of IFN type 1 receptor mRNA expression, which is reflected in poor induction of IFN-beta-dependent genes. This finding indicates that the resistance of SPRET/Ei mice to LPS is due to disruption of a positive-feedback loop that amplifies IFN-beta production. In contrast to TLR4-deficient mice, SPRET/Ei mice resist both LPS and sepsis induced with Klebsiella pneumoniae.
...
PMID:The wild-derived inbred mouse strain SPRET/Ei is resistant to LPS and defective in IFN-beta production. 1645 98

Fever is a phylogenetically ancient host reaction to invading microorganisms and other noxious stimuli. Poikylothermic organisms can reach febrile temperatures by seeking a hot environment in response to a higher set point in their thermoregulatory center. Endothermic organisms produce febrile temperatures through endogenous heat production at the expenditure of a higher metabolic rate. Nevertheless, fever has been conserved during evolution through millennia, obviously because of its advantage for host defense. Despite of these arguments most doctors, nurses and patients treat fever with antipyretics. The role of fever for the recovery from low risk infections is marginal at best. A large study of ibuprofen in patients with severe sepsis could not establish a positive or negative role on the course or final outcome of the infection in an intensive care setting. These clinical observations seemingly contradict findings in severe experimental bacterial infections in rodents but it has to be taken into consideration that these animals, in contrast to patients, received no antibiotic treatment. In patients with influenza-like illnesses non-steroidal antirhumatics (NSAR) improve fever and wellbeing with little or no evidence for undesired side-effects. It therefore appears appropriate to treat patients with these and similar infections with NSAR. Antipyretic therapy in special patient groups such as brain injury victims, patients with cardiac or respiratory failure or dementia has not been established to be indicated to overcome a worsening of these organs to fail during infections. In children with a history of fever convulsions prevention or lowering of fever does not reduce recurrence. In patients with strokes it appears advisable however to use antipyretics in case of fever despite of a present lack of a proven beneficial effect. In conclusion symptomatic antipyretic therapy should be considered for low risk infections if patient suffering from fever. For more severe infections antipyretic therapy can be applied on an individual basis without too much hope to improve outcome or cause a severe worsening of prognosis.
...
PMID:[Fever--useful or noxious symptom that should be treated?]. 1661 88

Infectious complications in individuals with chronic kidney disease (CKD) pose a significant source of morbidity and mortality. The overall scope of major infectious complications has, however, received little attention even though some of these events may be preventable. We reviewed infectious hospitalization rates in the CKD and end-stage renal disease (ESRD) populations, comparing them with the non-CKD and non-ESRD groups. We also reviewed preventive vaccination rates for influenza, pneumonia, and pneumococcal pneumonia to assess areas of potential improvement. We reviewed the medical literature and present findings based on hospitalization rates for pneumonia, sepsis/bacteremia, and urinary tract infections in the Medicare CKD, ESRD, and non-CKD populations. Vaccination rates were determined from submitted claims for services with specific codes for the vaccinations. Regardless of the primary cause for the development of CKD, primary kidney disease or secondary to hypertension, diabetes mellitus, or other chronic condition, patient outcomes after the development of infections were 3 to 4 times worse than in the non-CKD population. Influenza vaccination rates were 52%, far less than the target of 90%. Pneumococcal pneumonia vaccination rate was only 13.5%, far less than recommended. CKD is associated with significant major infectious complications, which occur at rates 3 to 4 times the general population. Providers can improve prevention by using fewer dialysis catheters and increasing vaccination rates for influenza and pneumococcal pneumonia.
...
PMID:Infectious complications in chronic kidney disease. 1681 25

Overwhelming infection in asplenic patients is a well documented occurrence in the literature. The introduction of immunization with polyvalent pneumococcal, Hemophilus Influenza and meningococcal vaccines significantly cut down the incidence of post-splenectomy sepsis and mortality. However, the issue of prophylactic antibiotic therapy in these patients remains inconclusive. There are contradictory reports bouncing between life-long treatment to no treatment. There are also more flexible approaches emerging from patient difficulties complying with a prolonged therapy. This debate calls for developing a better predictive approach based on genetic profiling of patients with different susceptibility to infectious pathogens, host-pathogens interactions as well as to identify the impact of factors such as age, on immunological competence.
...
PMID:Post-splenectomy antibiotic prophylaxis--unfinished story: to treat or not to treat? 1693 44

Infectious muscle diseases have very different aetiologies. The viral myositides are proved by clinical and laboratory evidences in various etiologic settings (Influenza A and B, Coxsackie and HIV). The bacterial myositis was considered in the near past a tropical disease, but in our days with migration of people from South to North and the endemia of AIDS it became a problem of the "civilized" world. On the other hand, tuberculous endemia in Central-Eastern Europe, including Romania, results in quite high incidence of osteoarticular tuberculosis. In this section the authors take into consideration some clinical entities, such as psoas abscess, postanginal sepsis, beta-haemolytic streptococcus infection and that caused by Koch bacillus. Other rare musculoskeletal infections such as gas gangrene and non-clostridial anaerobic myonecrosis are also reviewed. Immune depression caused by underlying diseases, therapies, alcoholism or old age is often encountered. The parasitic aetiologies include infestations with Trichinella spiralis, Cysticercus cellulosae, Toxoplasma and Amoeba. The contribution of imagistic methods to diagnosis is emphasised. Ultrasonography associated with CT imaging are usually used, while MRI should be reserved for cases in which axial skeleton is involved. The management is based on appropriate antibiotic therapy and surgery.
...
PMID:Infectious muscle disease. 1723 94


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