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

Staging laparotomy in patients with Hodgkin's disease continues to be a controversial procedure in their management. Between 1970 and 1986, 67 patients up to 18 years of age were seen with Hodgkin's disease. The results of staging laparotomy performed on 39 of these children are reviewed. The clinical stage was changed as a result of laparotomy in 43.6% of cases, with 12.8% of cases upstaged and 30.8% of cases downstaged. All changes in stage modified the proposed treatment for the patient. In 20.5% of patients the laparotomy was positive, and in all cases the spleen was involved. Preoperative lymphangiography did not accurately identify nodal disease. Of the patients with negative laparotomies, 10% developed relapse in the abdomen. Major complications included three episodes of bacterial sepsis, with one death due to Streptococcal pneumonia and one to Neisseria gonorrhea. All septic events occurred prior to the use of pneumococcal vaccine and prophylactic antibiotics. One patient required reoperation for intestinal obstruction with bowel resection. None of the currently used noninvasive tests accurately identifies intraabdominal disease. Therefore, staging laparotomy continues to play an important role in the early management of Hodgkin's disease.
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PMID:Staging laparotomy for Hodgkin's disease in children. 317 39

One hundred cases of ovarian cancer were studied at autopsy to determine the effect of morphologic and clinical factors on survival time, the primary cause of death, and tumor/treatment-related morbidity. The mean survival time was 19 months (0 to 174 months). Increasing neoplastic histologic grade and increasing clinical stage at diagnosis were each associated with decreased survival time. In grade I tumors, the mean survival time was 84 months; in grade II tumors, it was 18 months; and in grade III tumors, it was 12 months (P = .0008). Patients who presented in stage I or II had a better survival time (28 months) than those who presented in stage III or IV (15 months) (P = .02). The most common causes of death were disseminated carcinomatosis (48%), infection (17%), pulmonary embolus (8%), and combinations of infection and carcinomatosis (11%). In patients dying of infection, 43% had sepsis, 21% had pneumonia, and 25% had a combination of sepsis and pneumonia. Escherichia coli and Klebsiella were the most common pathogens identified postmortem. Intestinal obstruction (51%) and ureteral obstruction (28%) were the most common forms of tumor-induced morbidity. Bone marrow depression and resultant pancytopenia was the most common form of treatment-induced morbidity.
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PMID:Survival time, causes of death, and tumor/treatment-related morbidity in 100 women with ovarian cancer. 318 48

Methotrexate, Cisplatin, and Vinblastine (MCV) was followed by Cisplatin plus radiation therapy in 19 patients with muscle-invading clinical Stage T2-4NXM0 transitional cell carcinoma of the urinary bladder (including cystectomy candidates), to achieve local control and prevent distant metastases. Radical cystectomy was recommended for all patients who failed to reach a complete response (CR = biopsy negative and cytology not positive) following MCV and Cisplatin X 2 plus 4000 cGy. Completely responding patients, and those partially responding patients unsuited for cystectomy, were selected for bladder conservation treated with additional irradiation to the bladder tumor volume (total 6,480 cGy) plus one additional Cisplatin treatment. Dose reductions were required for stomatitis in 26%, mild bone marrow depression in 58%, and renal toxicity in 5% of the patients. During the Cisplatin/4000 cGy, mild dysuria occurred in 68% of patients and 36% had mild bowel hyperactivity. Serious complications have occurred in two patients to date. One patient had recurrent pulmonary emboli, marked reduction in bladder capacity, and diarrhea. A second had bladder perforation during cystoscopic evaluation after MCV and a small bowel obstruction after Cisplatin and 4000 cGy. There was no treatment-related sepsis. Three patients had initial complete transurethral resection of their tumors and therefore 16 patients are evaluable for tumor responsiveness to this protocol. Four patients (25%) were biopsy negative and cytology negative, whereas three additional patients (19%) were biopsy negative but cytology positive following initial MCV. Six patients (38%) were biopsy negative and cytology negative whereas three additional patients (19%) were biopsy negative and cytology positive following MCV and Cisplatin X 2 plus 4000 cGy pelvic radiation. Of the entire group, 9 patients were treated with full-dose radiotherapy. All of these patients are alive without evidence of tumor on rebiopsy of the original tumor site, but one has a persistent positive cytology. Seven patients had a radical cystectomy and 6 are disease free. The treatment of 3 patients deviated from the protocol. Overall, only one patient has developed distant metastases and currently 84% of the patients are disease-free, although follow-up is short. To date, this feasibility study has been clinically practical and well tolerated. The proportion of CR's suggests that this program may prove to be an organ-sparing and curative approach for a significant number of patients, but more experience and follow-up are required.
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PMID:Invasive bladder carcinoma: preliminary report of selective bladder conservation by transurethral surgery, upfront MCV (methotrexate, cisplatin, and vinblastine) chemotherapy and pelvic irradiation plus cisplatin. 318 28

A retrospective analysis of 70 consecutive patients with a clinical diagnosis of intestinal obstruction from January 1983 to September 1985 was reviewed. Mean age was 62 years. Etiological factors included adhesions 50 percent, malignancy 24 percent, volvulus 12 percent, diverticulitis 7 percent, hernias 4 percent, and radiation enteritis, mesenteric infarction, and perforation of the cecum in the remaining 3 percent. Complications included wound infection 9 percent (n = 6), intra-abdominal sepsis 7 percent (n = 5), and recurrent small bowel obstruction 4 percent (n = 3). Overall mortality was 24 percent (n = 7).Results of the univariant analysis showed no association between the clinical signs of intestinal obstruction, that is, fever, tachycardia, leukocytosis, and local tenderness, and gangrenous bowel. A multiple regression analysis showed, however, that only 14 percent of the variance was able to predict the gangrenous bowel based on clinical signs. In conclusion, the classical signs of intestinal obstruction are poor indicators for compromised bowel, and early surgical intervention will reduce the incidence of ischemic bowel and mortality.
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PMID:Intestinal obstruction: still a lethal clinical entity. 332 41

The records of 300 patients with a diagnosis of small bowel obstruction were evaluated to determine which factors, if any, were prognostic of clinical outcome. Ninety per cent of patients had at least one prior abdominal procedure; those of a gynecologic or obstetric nature were most common. Abdominal pain (92%), vomiting (82%), abdominal tenderness (64%), and distention (59%) were the most frequent symptoms and signs, and plain abdominal x-rays were abnormal in 273 (91%) patients. Two hundred and nine patients (70%) underwent surgical repair, of which 48 (23%) required resection of intestine for densely adherent or strangulated bowel. Contrast studies were generally not helpful and associated with barium peritonitis in two patients. The mortality rate for the entire series was 9 per cent, which doubled for those who underwent resection. Septic complications occurred in 31 per cent of the survivors in this group. Fourteen of the 16 patients who died from abdominal sepsis had a delay in presentation and/or treatment, which was the most important prognosis factor for patient outcome.
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PMID:The importance of early diagnosis of small bowel obstruction. 341

In 144 pull-through-operations performed for anorectal-atresia, following complications were observed: pneumonia 11%, sepsis 8.3%, peritonitis 5%, bowel obstruction 5%, osteomyelitis 1%, retraction of the pulled-through colon 4%, anal stenosis 16%, secondary megacolon 9%, fistula relapse 8%, mucosal prolapse 4%. Recto-urethral, recto-vesical- and recto-vaginal fistula relapses are managed by interposition of the gracile muscle. Anal stenoses and secondary megacolon are prevented by a sufficiently long postoperative bougienage.
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PMID:[Therapy of postoperative complications following abdominoperineal or abdominosacroperineal pull-through surgery in anal atresia]. 343 Dec 99

A prospective study was conducted on 344 children aged from 3 months to 16 years with acute appendicitis. Most children presented with typical features of acute appendicitis (70%) or peritonitis (28%). Atypical presentation was uncommon and occurred only in seven young children, masquerading as intestinal obstruction, gastroenteritis or urinary tract infection. Prolonged delay in surgery was associated with a rise in incidence of late appendicitis (gangrenous and perforated appendicitis). This rise was especially marked 37 h after onset of symptoms. The main causes of delay were inability of the parents and primary care medical practitioners to recognize the disease early. Surgeons contributed very little to the delay. High risk factors for postappendectomy sepsis were young children under 6 years old, late appendicitis, obese patients, inferior systemic antibiotic regimes and inexperienced surgeons. Young children had high postoperative sepsis mainly because of the high incidence of late appendicitis due to their inability to express their symptoms properly. They were not especially prone to postappendectomy sepsis; they had the same degree of appendicitis compared with older children. Measures to decrease the postappendectomy morbidity are suggested.
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PMID:Acute appendicitis in children. 343 36

This is a survey of 234 pediatric patients in whom staging laparotomy/splenectomy was carried out (1975 to 1981) in the course of the Intergroup Hodgkin's Disease in Childhood Study (IHDCS). Relapse has occurred in 44 of these patients, and 12 have died, 7 secondary to extension of lymphoma, 2 with herpes or pneumocystis infections, 2 with leukemia, and 1 from an unrelated accident. During the period of surveillance (mean 5.5 yr), five episodes of bacterial sepsis (positive blood cultures) have occurred, including two due to Streptococcus pneumoniae; and three, to Hemophilus influenzae. The former occurred in the small group of patients in this series who had not received the prescribed pneumococcal vaccination. No fatalities were associated with these septic episodes. Intestinal obstruction secondary to adhesions (benign) occurred in eight patients and was managed without intestinal resection or mortality. One patient required operative release of an obstructed ureter following laparotomy, and one, oophorectomy for an infarcted (transposed) ovary.
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PMID:Postsplenectomy sepsis and other complications following staging laparotomy for Hodgkin's disease in childhood. 348 87

The outcome of mucosal proctectomy with ileoanal anastomosis in patients with polyposis coli has not been well studied. A series of 25 patients with polyposis treated at the Mount Sinai Hospital over a period of ten years is reported. The mean age of the patients was 23 years. Early postoperative complications were present in seven patients and consisted of thrombophlebitis (three), pelvic sepsis (three), and retraction of the anastomosis (one). Intestinal obstruction requiring laparotomy occurred in another five patients. Twenty-three patients were followed for a mean of 47 months after closure of the ileostomy. Ninety-one percent are satisfied with the operative results. The mean number of bowel movements per 24 hours is 6.0. All patients are continent, but eight have occasional episodes of rectal seepage at night. Nearly 50 percent require some antidiarrheal medication. New adenomatous polyps have developed just above the dentate line in four patients. Patients with polyposis coli seem to have fewer serious complications requiring excision of the ileoanal anastomosis than patients with ulcerative colitis. They also should have lifelong surveillance of the entire gastrointestinal tract even after total colectomy with ileoanal anastomosis.
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PMID:Familial polyposis coli. Results of mucosal proctectomy with ileoanal anastomosis. 359 59

A series of 3600 consecutive patients undergoing laparotomy was studied prospectively. Fifty six patients required a total of 64 urgent re-explorations of the abdomen during the period of hospitalisation after the first operation. The re-exploration rate was 1.7%. Re-laparotomy was most often necessary in the elderly and following gastroduodenal or intestinal operations. The indication for re-operation must in part reflect the nature of surgical practice but in this general surgical unit the most common complications requiring re-laparotomy were sepsis, small bowel obstruction and wound dehiscence. Biliary operations were relatively uncomplicated. Mortality rose with age. Diagnosis depends upon the ability to distinguish the clinical symptoms and signs of developing complication from the clinical features inevitable following abdominal surgery. We believe that the decision to re-operate and the second operation should normally be undertaken by experienced surgical staff.
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PMID:Emergency abdominal re-exploration in a district general hospital. 363 74


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