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

Fine-needle transhepatic cholangiography is a diagnostic tool often used for evaluating the biliary tree because of its wide availability and relatively low complication rate. Fine-needle cholangiography is primarily used in patients with obstructive jaundice with dilated ducts, but has been useful in patients with those entities that cause obstruction without dilatation (sclerosing cholangitis, ampullary stenosis, nonobstructing stone). We review our experience with over 700 cases of fine-needle cholangiography. The complication rate (due to bleeding, peritonitis, sepsis, and death) is less than 5%. The central role that fine-needle cholangiography plays in defining the site and cause of biliary obstruction is emphasized.
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PMID:Fine-needle transhepatic cholangiography. Indications and usefulness. 712 16

Plasma fibronectin was determined in 121 normal adults and in 149 patients. Fibronectin levels in normals were strongly influenced by sex and age. The mean value of the protein in cancer patients did not differ from that in normal controls; however, patients with cryofibrinogenaemia or extensive liver metastases had lower values whereas those with obstructive jaundice due to pancreatic carcinoma had higher values than normal controls. Fibronectin levels were greatly increased in patients with primary biliary cirrhosis and moderately elevated in nephrotic syndrome. In patients with severe infection or sepsis, plasma fibronectin did not show a consistent pattern. Patients with overt disseminated intravascular coagulation, irrespective of its cause, had the lowest plasma fibronectin concentrations.
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PMID:Plasma fibronectin in normal subjects and in various disease states. 725 92

Endoscopic retrograde cholangiography, percutaneous transhepatic cholangiography with external bile drainage and a combined method utilizing both procedures were evaluated in 187 patients with obstructive jaundice. Ductal obstructive regions were located in 90 per cent of cases by endoscopic retrograde cholangiography, and 55 per cent of these were correctly diagnosed. Complications were observed in 7.9 per cent with a mortality rate of 2.9 per cent. The most serious complication was cholangitic sepsis. By percutaneous transhepatic cholangiography with external bile drainage, ductal obstructive regions were correctly located in 82 per cent, 37 per cent of these patients were correctly diagnosed. Complications occurred in 9.2 per cent with a mortality rate of 1.5 per cent. The most serious complication was massive bleeding. Successful external bile drainage could be obtained in most cases. The combined method overcomes the disadvantages of the single methods and the cause of obstructive jaundice can be diagnosed more precisely. The surgeon has a better knowledge of the type and the extent of the lesion prior to definitive surgery and can operate more safely on patients with obstructive jaundiced when the serum total bilirubin, has decreased to a level below 5 mg/dl.
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PMID:Evaluation of cholangeographic procedures in diagnosis of obstructive jaundice. 728 76

PTC was performed in 86 patients with obstructive jaundice, between February/80--March/81 diagnosing 20 cases of the hepatic hilium carcinoma, 14 of pancreatic carcinoma, and 2 multiplex abscess of the liver. PTC-D was successfully attempted on 16 patients, catheterizing the intrahepatic biliary tree in 15 and maintaining a good biliary flow in 10 of them. The catheter was on the correct position into the biliary tree in 6 patients, and the drainage continued for 7-20 days. General improvement was obtained in 83.33%, itching decreased in 40% and disappeared in 60%, cholestasis was reduced in 100% and sepsis in 75%. Complications of the technique were: pain during the introduction of the guide wire (18.75%) and transitory hemobilia (31.21%). PTC-D seems to be a procedure with a precisely indication in every transitory obstructive jaundice, in order to put the patient in better conditions to a definitive therapy: 1) Surgery 2) Prosthesis 3) External-internal biliary drainage.
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PMID:[Percutaneous transhepatic biliary drainage in obstructive jaundice]. 733 50

Approximately 1.3% of patients with lymphoma develop obstructive jaundice secondary to lymphomatous involvement of the extrahepatic biliary system. This may occur either as an initial or as a late manifestation of disease. Clinically and radiographically the condition may mimic a variety of more common causes of obstructive jaundice. Surgical exploration may be necessary to confirm the diagnosis, but local radiotherapy would appear to be the preferred mode of treatment. Rapid progression to systemic disease occurs in the majority of patients, necessitating multidrug chemotherapy. Control of jaundice by radiotherapy is good, but long-term prognosis is poor. Supervening sepsis and gastrointestinal bleeding caused the majority of deaths, suggesting that adjunctive nutritional support, immunologic enhancement, and stress ulcer prophylaxis may be necessary if survival is to be improved.
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PMID:The diagnosis and treatment of obstructive jaundice secondary to malignant lymphoma: a problem in multidisciplinary management. 739 35

Eleven patients, included in a series of 105 orthotopic liver transplant recipients, underwent interventional radiologic procedures for post-operative complications. Seven patients had obstructive jaundice, three patients had sepsis, and one patient was bleeding from the T-tube. Cholangiography, performed in 9/11 patients, demonstrated stenosis of the anastomosis in six cases, stenosis of the intrahepatic biliary tree in one case, and stenosis of both tracts in the remaining two cases. Four patients were treated with bilioplasty (from 1 to 5 sessions), using balloon catheters (8-10 mm) followed by stones removal in one case, and by the placement of a metallic stent in another case. The follow-up ranged from one to three years: no biliary stasis occurred, during that period, in these patients. Another patient with recurrent cholangiocarcinoma of the biliary anastomosis, treated with Carey-Coons endoprosthesis and brachytherapy, died four months later without jaundice. In the three patients with sepsis and in the patient with bleeding from the T-tube, intra- or extra-hepatic (in one case) multiple abscesses were demonstrated. The conservative treatment with the placement of percutaneous drainage catheters, associated with internal biliary drainage in two cases, allowed complete symptoms resolution. The technical success obtained in all patients confirmed the effectiveness of interventional radiology in the treatment of biliary complications after liver transplant, thus avoiding the need of surgical reintervention.
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PMID:[Nonvascular interventional radiology in the treatment of post-liver transplant complications. The clinico-radiological correlations and technical considerations]. 750 36

Bacterial translocation from the gastrointestinal tract and macrophage activation are central to current theories of sepsis. The relevance of both in obstructive jaundice is unclear. The effect of bile duct ligation for 7 days on bacterial translocation to mesenteric lymph nodes and on macrophage activation in a rat model was examined. Compared with an incidence of zero in sham-ligated controls, bile-duct ligated rats had a 67 per cent incidence of Gram-negative colonization of mesenteric lymph nodes. This was associated with a significant (P < 0.001) decrease in macrophage tumour necrosis factor, superoxide anion and nitric oxide production compared with that in sham controls. Spontaneous bacterial translocation occurs in experimental obstructive jaundice and is associated with marked suppression of macrophage activation. This suggests a mechanism whereby jaundiced patients may be more susceptible to persistent infection but relatively protected against uncontrolled sepsis.
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PMID:Failure of macrophage activation in experimental obstructive jaundice: association with bacterial translocation. 748 87

Cowden syndrome is a rare syndrome of chromosome abnormalities presenting with polyposis of digestive tracts, characteristic skin eruption and neuromuscular disorders. A 56-year-old male patient with Cowden syndrome underwent upper abdominal surgery under general anesthesia followed by post-operative epidural analgesia with buprenorphine. Proposed total gastrectomy was not performed because of massive invasion of carcinoma in the abdominal cavity and gastrojejunostomy was done instead. The anesthesia was satisfactory with inhalation of nitrous oxide and enflurane with intravenous vecuronium. Neuromuscular monitoring with electric twitch-responses of the hand showed normal patterns throughout the anesthesia. The recovery from anesthesia and neuromuscular blockade was prompt. Intermittent epidural buprenorphine, twice a day (0.2 mg of buprenorphine in 9 ml of normal saline for one time) was started just after the recovery of anesthesia and continued for four days. Delirium occurred two days after beginning epidural buprenorphine and disappeared three days after its discontinuation. The patient died 52 days after the operation from obstructive jaundice and sepsis. The delirium, therefore, seems to have been caused by buprenorphine possibly due to its impaired metabolism by the liver. Although we did not experience any abnormal neuromuscular reactions to vecuronium or anesthetic agents, it is important to perform preoperative neuromuscular examinations and peri-operative monitoring in the anesthetic management of a patient with this syndrome.
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PMID:[Anesthetic management of a patient with Cowden syndrome]. 773 7

This report presented a twelve-year experience from 1981 to 1992. Seventy-four cases of congenital biliary tract dilatation were at diagnosed an age of 6 days to 16 years. Twenty-two cases were infants. There were 54 females and 20 males. The ratio of female to male was 2.7:1. The classic triad of abdominal pain, jaundice and a palpable mass was seen in eleven cases (14.9%). Most children suffered from abdominal pain (50/74), vomiting (45/74), anorexia (42/74) and jaundice (34/74). Prolonged jaundice was the main symptom in infancy (15/22). A long common pancreatico-biliary channel was seen in six cases (6/47); the bile amylase level was elevated in five cases (5/20), one patient had a complex union with obstructive jaundice. All these cases were diagnosed by preoperative sonography accurately (100%). According to the Todani's classification, type Ia was the most common (40/74), followed by type IV-A (25/74) and type Ic (8/74). Cholelithiasis (13/74), perforation (9/74), and atresia/stenosis of distal choledochus (8/74) were the most common associated conditions. Cyst excision with biliary tract reconstruction was performed in all cases. Reoperation was needed in ten cases. Two cases died postoperatively due to sepsis and cholangitis induced hepatic failure.
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PMID:Congenital biliary tract dilatation in infancy and childhood--74 cases experience. 785 Jun 45

Nine (1.66%) out of 542 cases of HCC treated surgically in our hospital between 1985 and 1992, had macroscopic bile duct thrombi. Three cases presented preoperatively with obstructive jaundice. Two of these received thrombectomy in the hilar bile duct and died of hepatic insufficiency on postoperative days 10 and 66, the other case underwent extended left lobectomy, but also died of renal failure and sepsis 3 months after the operation. In addition, we also treated 6 cases diagnosed at earlier stages than those presenting with obstructive jaundice with both hepatectomy and thrombectomy. In these patients the outcome was as follows: 2 died of recurrent HCC 3 months and 16 months, respectively, after operation, 1 died of apoplexy with no recurrence after 19 months, 1 had a recurrence 5 months after the operation, but is still alive after 7 months, and 2 are still alive 24 months and 60 months after surgery with no recurrence. The outcome is still poor in our series with obstructive jaundice. But in this report, we propose radical surgical treatment for HCC with bile duct thrombi in accordance with our classification, especially for those cases without obstructive jaundice.
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PMID:Classification and surgical treatment of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) with bile duct thrombi. 795 70


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