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)

Twenty-seven patients with invasive bladder carcinoma (clinical stages T2 to T4) who were not candidates for cystectomy were treated by transurethral resection, cis-diamminedichloroplatinum (cisplatin) and full dose radiotherapy according to protocol 8 of the National Bladder Cancer Collaborative Group A. Nausea and vomiting occurred in 74 per cent of the patients but were mild in 41 per cent. Maximum followup was 27 months and during that time 3 significant toxic reactions occurred: renal failure, systemic sepsis and a transient partial small bowel obstruction. Of 17 evaluable patients complete responses of the primary bladder cancer to the treatment were achieved in 11 of 13 with stages cT2 and cT3 cancer and in 2 of 4 with stage cT4 disease. The members of National Bladder Cancer Collaborative Group A have found transurethral resection, cisplatin and full dose external beam radiotherapy practical clinically. Longer followup will be necessary to determine if the observed high initial complete response rate of the tumor indicates real lasting benefit for these patients.
...
PMID:Cisplatin and full dose irradiation for patients with invasive bladder carcinoma: a preliminary report of tolerance and local response. 643 10

In the past 10 years, the diagnosis of pseudoobstruction lasting more than two months was confirmed in 10 infants after sepsis, meconium ileus, and Hirschsprung's disease were excluded, and surgery or autopsy failed to demonstrate a site of mechanical intestinal obstruction. Four infants had undergone prior operation for another anomaly: gastroschisis (2) and ileal atresia (2). Five of the remaining infants also had megacystis. The lack of coordinated intestinal motility was best appreciated by radiocontrast small bowel studies, which showed degrees of aperistalsis or segmentation. Rectal manometric studies were not helpful. Histology of the intestine was normal in seven, while a gross deficiency of nerve fibres was noted in one patient and a myopathy of smooth muscle in another. A variety of drugs used to stimulate peristalsis were ineffective. Seven patients had 25 operations, often to exclude mechanical causes of obstruction. The mainstay of treatment was TPN and intestinal decompression. Six children survived; their ages ranged between 8 months and 9 years (median age, 16 months). There has been improvement in intestinal peristalsis in five children, three of whom now tolerate a regular diet and two of whom are on TPN and are currently increasing oral intake. Four infants died, two from sepsis, two from TPN-related hepatic failure. In contrast to previous reports, we conclude that intestinal pseudoobstruction may be self-limited in some neonates, including those with megacystis. Therapy should consist of long-term nutritional support and treatment of other anomalies that may be present.
...
PMID:Neonatal intestinal pseudoobstruction. 644 Sep 67

This is a study of 234 children and young adult patients entered in the Intergroup Hodgkin's Disease in Childhood (stage I-II) Study from November 1975 to June 1981 and followed for a mean of 3.8 years after laparotomy. All patients had a staging laparotomy with total splenectomy, liver biopsy, and sampling of abdominal lymph node groups. Four patients (1.7%) have had documented sepsis, and three have had possible sepsis. There has been no sepsis-related death. Intestinal obstruction requiring operation was noted in four patients (no intestinal resection required). Urgent operation was necessary in two patients, one with ureteral obstruction and one with ovarian torsion, following a repositioning procedure, neither of these patients died. Organisms in the four patients with positive blood cultures were Streptococcus pneumoniae (two) and Haemophilus influenzae (two). Of the 234 patients in the study, 194 (83%) had received polyvalent pneumococcal vaccine, and 174 (74%) were taking prophylactic antibiotics. One of the two patients with pneumococcal sepsis had not been vaccinated, and the second was vaccinated only during radiotherapy. Only one of the four patients with positive blood cultures was on a prophylactic antibiotic treatment regimen at the time of the septic episode. The liabilities in employing laparotomy-splenectomy for the evaluation of pediatric patients with Hodgkin's disease include both general surgical complications and an increase in the risk of hyperacute infection, specifically related to encapsulated species. The latter appears to be modified to a major degree by current prophylactic measures or therapy.
...
PMID:Complications related to 234 staging laparotomies performed in the Intergroup Hodgkin's Disease in Childhood study. 647 52

We have presented a case of splenosis (autotransplantation of splenic tissue) after traumatic rupture of the spleen, which produced bowel obstruction. Although rarely symptomatic, these splenic implants must be considered in the differential diagnosis of abdominal pain with or without intestinal obstruction in all postsplenectomy patients. When an incidental finding at exploratory celiotomy, these implants should be preserved as a means of retaining splenic function and preventing the complication of postsplenectomy sepsis.
...
PMID:Bowel obstruction due to infarcted splenosis. 672 56

From 1968 to 1979, 18 patients underwent emergency abdominal colectomy with ileorectal anastomosis. Indications for operation included massive colonic bleeding (11), obstructing carcinoma (5), toxic megacolon (1), and enterocolitis (1). Five patients died postoperatively (27.8 per cent). Causes of death included sepsis, upper gastrointestinal bleeding, and respiratory failure. All had peritonitis, and five had documented anastomotic leaks. Seven of the surviving patients had significant morbidity from the procedure which included anastomotic leak, small bowel obstruction, wound infection, sepsis, and pulmonary emboli. Only six patients survived without complications. Although others have written about the safety of emergency subtotal colectomy with ileorectal anastomosis, our experience suggests this procedure is associated with excessive morbidity and mortality.
...
PMID:Emergency abdominal colectomy with primary anastomosis. 697 Jun 59

The development of the bacterial flora of neonates with congenital abnormalities of the gastro-intestinal tract was studied in 31 infants during the first 10 days of life. Specimens were collected from the umbilicus, mouth and gastro-intestinal tract on the pre-operative day, at operation and on post-operative days 1, 2, 3, 5, 7 and 10. Bacteria were isolated semi-quantitatively on a variety of plain and selective media and identified by conventional methods.Staphylococcus albus was the predominant species isolated from the umbilicus; it was recovered from 24 of the 31 babies. The viridans group of streptococci and Streptococcus salivarius were the commonest species isolated from the mouth; there were no differences between the babies with different abnormalities and treatment with antibiotics had no effect on the bacterial flora. Ten babies were colonized by each species on the pre-operative day, and 25 and 19 respectively by the tenth post-operative day. Anaerobic gram-positive cocci were the predominant oral anaerobes. Bacteria were not isolated from the rectal swabs of babies with tracheo-oesophageal fistula (TOF) or small bowel atresia on the pre-operative days. Post-operatively the predominant faecal isolates from babies with TOF were Str. faecalis, Escherichia coli and Clostridium perfringens. About 80% of the babies with small bowel atresia were colonized by Str. faecalis and Bacteroides vulgatus, 60% each by E. coli, Klebsiella aerogenes and Str. faecium. The five babies with necrotizing enterocolitis were colonized by Str. faecalis, E. coli, Cl. perfringens and Cl. difficile; Bacteroides spp. were not recovered from any of them. The commonest facultative species recovered from babies with large bowel obstruction were Str. faecalis and E. coli. B. vulgatus, Cl. perfringens and Bifidobacterium spp. were the commonest anaerobes and anaerobes outnumbered aerobes. No significant isolates were recovered from the wound swabs and none of the babies developed post-surgical sepsis.
...
PMID:The bacterial flora of neonates with congenital abnormalities of the gastro-intestinal tract. 705 28

Operations for intraabdominal abscess were performed in 46 (20 percent) of 230 patients with Crohn's colitis and ileocolitis treated at the Mount Sinai Hospital during the decade 1964 to 1974. Internal and external fistulas, intestinal obstruction, and abdominal mass occurred significantly more often in patients with intraabdominal abscess, while only overt bleeding was significantly less common. Abscesses were equally divided between 23 patients who had undergone previous surgery and 23 cases of spontaneous onset. IN ileocolitis, the most frequent site of origin was the terminal ileum with right lower quadrant abscess, as opposed to a sigmoid origin in colitis with presentation in the left lower quadrant. There was no mortality among 24 patients treated with simple drainage, usually for superficial abscess, but enterocutaneous fistulas persisted in 5 of these patients (21 percent). Four of 11 patients (35 percent) died after undergoing bypass or ileostomy diversion. Among the 31 patients surviving either of these procedures, 18 (60 percent) required subsequent resection of the diseased bowel. By contrast, among 11 patients treated with primary en bloc resection plus drainage, there was only 1 death (9 percent) and no abscess recurrence or chronic enterocutaneous fistula formation during a follow-up period of 1 to 4 years. The high mortality rate after bypass may be explained by the more serious nature of the disease and the preexisting deep intraabdominal abscess and postoperative sepsis. Simple extraperitoneal drainage is a safe procedure associated with an extremely low mortality; however, when feasible, resection of the diseased bowel seems to be the treatment of choice for abscess in patients with Crohn's colitis and ileocolitis.
...
PMID:Intraabdominal abscess in Crohn's (ileo) colitis. 709 6

Nonspecific complications from staging laparotomy are usually related to general anesthesia or abdominal exploration. Specific complications for the procedure do exist: intubation difficulties during administration of anesthesia to patients with untreated mediastinal disease, sepsis in up to 20% of patients, depending on stage of disease and intensity of postoperative chemotherapy and radiotherapy, arterial and possibly venous thromboemboli from extensive retroperitoneal node dissection, pancreatitis, small bowel obstruction from adhesions to node biopsy sites, operative mishaps, subphrenic abscesses, and bleeding from liver biopsies. Certain patient subpopulations are at especially high risk for some of these complications and their identification and possible measures to minimize such problems are proposed.
...
PMID:Complications from staging laparotomy for Hodgkin disease. 725 52

Indications for surgery, operative procedures, and the early and late sequelae of surgery for Crohn's ileocolitis have been studied in a series of 250 patients admitted to Mount Sinai Hospital, New York, between 1960 and 1975. The most common indications for surgery were small-bowel obstruction in ileocolitis, and medical intractability in Crohn's colitis. Early postoperative complications (within 30 days of surgery) followed 79 operative procedures (15%), and were most commonly wound infections (7%), intra-abdominal abscess (2.6%), and postoperative intestinal obstruction (2.4%). Late sequelae (30 days to 15 years following surgery) included intestinal obstruction in 36 patients, external fistulae in 41 patients, and ileostomy problems in 19 patients, and were most frequently caused by recurrent disease in the terminal portion of the ileum. Mortality following surgery for Crohn's disease may be subdivided into two groups, early and late. All eight early postoperative deaths were secondary to sepsis, present in every instance prior to operation. The eight late deaths were caused by metastatic cancer in six and recurrent disease in two. Resection of excluded segments of bowel, as in four of the patients in this series, will reduce the late cancer risk.
...
PMID:Surgery and its sequelae in Crohn's colitis and ileocolitis. 746 65

During laparoscopic cholecystectomy, gallbladder perforation with leakage of bile and/or gallstones into the abdominal cavity occurs frequently. When this occurs, our practice has been to lavage the operative field and retrieve as many gallstones as possible. We were concerned, however, that complications secondary to infection or adhesions might develop. To address this issue, our first 250 consecutive patients undergoing laparoscopic cholecystectomy were surveyed by postal questionnaire. In the 35-48 months (mean, 41 months) since operation, six patients (2.6%) died of nonbiliary causes. Of the 225 patients (90%) who completed the questionnaire, 73 (33%) suffered intraoperative gallbladder perforation. There were no late wound or intraabdominal infectious complications and no patient has required reoperation for intraabdominal sepsis or bowel obstruction. In the entire group, gastrointestinal symptoms were prevalent and included flatulence (40%), loose stools or fecal urgency (35%), belching (23%), and nausea (4%). The prevalence of these complaints was similar in patients with and without gallbladder perforation. Intraoperative gallbladder perforation during laparoscopic cholecystectomy, therefore, does not cause adverse long-term complications when accompanied by operative lavage and stone removal.
...
PMID:The influence of intraoperative gallbladder perforation on long-term outcome after laparoscopic cholecystectomy. 748 16


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