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)

In sheep, endotoxin (LPS) causes pulmonary hypertension, hypoxemia, leukopenia, exudation of protein-rich lung lymph, reduced dynamic compliance (Cdyn), and increased resistance to airflow (RL), changes similar to those seen in human sepsis and sepsis-induced ARDS. We used well-described methods in the awake sheep-endotoxin model to evaluate the effectiveness of a commercially manufactured antibody to prevent the physiologic changes of endotoxemia. In awake sheep with chronic lung lymph fistulas, we used a whole-body plethysmograph to measure Cdyn, RL, and FRC. Pulmonary artery, left atrial, and systemic arterial pressures were recorded continuously. Arterial blood gases (for calculating AaPO2), leukocyte counts, and lymph samples were collected every 30 min. Animals received a 30-min (2 mg/kg) infusion of antiendotoxin antibody 4 h before LPS (0.75 micrograms/kg) challenge (n = 4), or were given a mixture of LPS (0.75 micrograms/kg) and antibody (2 mg/kg) that had been incubated in vitro at 37 degrees C for 30 min before infusion (n = 6). A control group given only 2 mg/kg of antibody (n = 4) showed no change in any measured parameter, whereas control animals receiving LPS alone (n = 6) exhibited a typical endotoxin response. In all animals receiving endotoxin, Cdyn declined by approximately 50% within 30 to 60 min, and RL increased approximately sixfold over a similar time course. Accompanying the abnormalities in lung mechanics were pulmonary hypertension, leukopenia, and widening of the AaPO2.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Studies of an antiendotoxin antibody in preventing the physiologic changes of endotoxemia in awake sheep. 222 82

We investigated the effects of two different Gram-negative bacteria and radiation-induced leukopenia on endotoxemia, cardiovascular abnormalities, and mortality in a canine model of septic shock. Serial hemodynamics were measured in conscious dogs using radionuclide heart scans and thermodilution cardiac output catheters. Plasma endotoxin concentrations were determined with a chromogenic Limulus amebocyte lysate assay. Viable Pseudomonas aeruginosa or Escherichia coli implanted intraperitoneally produced concordant hemodynamic patterns of septic shock (p less than 0.01). Endotoxin concentrations were more than tenfold lower in dogs infected with P aeruginosa compared with E coli (p less than 0.0001). Despite lower endotoxin levels, P aeruginosa-infected dogs had a higher mortality (p less than 0.01), more severe hypotension (p less than 0.05), and greater depression of the left ventricular ejection fraction (p less than 0.05) than dogs with E coli sepsis. A nonlethal E coli challenge combined with leukopenia (induced by a nonlethal dose of radiation) resulted in a mortality of 60 percent (p less than 0.01) without greater cardiovascular dysfunction or higher endotoxin concentrations. These findings suggest that bacterial products other than endotoxin and host-related factors may be important contributors to the toxicity, cardiovascular instability, and mortality of Gram-negative septic shock. Quantitative determinations of plasma endotoxin are unlikely to correlate with the clinical severity of septicemia in heterogeneous patient populations infected with different Gram-negative organisms.
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PMID:Pseudomonas aeruginosa compared with Escherichia coli produces less endotoxemia but more cardiovascular dysfunction and mortality in a canine model of septic shock. 224 91

23 newly diagnosed patients affected by cutaneous T-cell lymphoma were treated with sub-cutaneous interferon alpha-2a to evaluate the therapeutic efficacy and the toxicity of this agent. IFN was administered daily with dose escalation from 3 to 18 million units for 12 weeks; thereafter, patients induced into complete (CR) or partial (PR) remission were given IFN at maximal tolerated dose 3 times weekly for 6 or 9 months. The objective tumor response was observed in 17 patients (74%): 8 (35%) were CR and 9 (39%) were PR. A 74-yr-old patient died because of neutropenia and sepsis at the end of induction phase, while receiving IFN at dose of 18 million units. Disease stage is the initial feature predictive of response to IFN therapy. The dose schedule of this study was well tolerated: only 3 patients developed liver toxicity, while leukopenia was evident in 6 patients. Only 2 CR patients have relapsed, 18 and 24 months from response; the remaining 6 CR patients are in continuous complete remission with a median follow-up of 41.8 months. 6 PR patients have progressed from 8 to 17 months after response, and in the 3 PR patients not yet progressed the response duration ranges from 20 to 24 months. In conclusion, interferon alpha-2a is a very effective agent in therapy of untreated cutaneous T-cell lymphoma with an overall response rate of 74%.
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PMID:Interferon alpha-2a in cutaneous T-cell lymphoma. 227 44

The elastase-alpha1-proteinase inhibitor complex (E-alpha 1-PI) is a well known, sensitive indicator of infection. The significance of this parameter was investigated in 12 febrile paediatric-oncological patients. With neutrophil counts greater than 500/microliters infections caused a definitive increase in E-alpha 1-PI serving as an additional diagnostic parameter. E-alpha 1-PI provided no additional information in situations of sepsis with leukopenia and simultaneous agranulocytosis. In patients with metastatic tumours, the assay of E-alpha 1-PI may differentiate between infection-related and tumour-related serological disturbances.
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PMID:[Value of the elastase-alpha 1-proteinase inhibitor complex in pediatric oncologic patients with fever]. 231 98

There exists high incidence of bacteremia, sepsis and meningitis in young infants with Salmonella infection. However, focal intracranial abscesses due to Salmonella infections are rare. We reported a 2-month-old male baby presenting salmonella infection with brain abscess and purpura fulminans. The patient's clinical course was fulminant. He was admitted due to fever, irritability, anemia and leukopenia. He developed cardiac arrest, shock and skin diathesis on his second hospitalization day. After resuscitation he became comatous and showed acrocyanosis and gangrenous skin over the hands, feet and left ear lobe. Both blood and cerebrospinal fluid cultures were Salmonella Group B. The patient got worse rapidly in spite of vigorous treatment. Subdural empyema, ventriculitis and later brain abscess were detected by serial brain sonograms. He died of central nervous system failure, gastrointestinal bleeding and renal failure on the eighteenth hospitalization day.
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PMID:Salmonella meningitis complicated with subdural empyema, brain abscess and purpura fulminans: report of one case. 257 4

We have treated 42 episodes of pediatric infections with sulbactam/ampicillin since 1987. Included were 9 cellulitis, 9 urinary tract infections, 5 cervical lymphadenitis, 4 meningitis, 2 thoracic empyema, 2 osteomyelitis, 2 sepsis, 1 furuncle, 1 perianal abscess, 1 dental abscess, 1 peritonsillitis, 1 salmonellosis, 1 shigellosis, 1 peritonitis, 1 suppurative thyroiditis, 1 infective endocarditis. Responsible pathogens were Escherichia coli in 8, Staphylococcus aureus in 6, Hemophilus influenzae in 2, Streptococcus pneumoniae in 3, Streptococcus viridans in 2, Staphylococcus epidermidis in 1, Bacteroides fragilis in 1, Salmonella D1 in 1, Shigella sonnei in 1, Klebsiella pneumoniae in 1, Enterobacter agglomerans in 1, Acinetobacter calcoaceticus in 1, Enterobacter cloacae in 1, group A beta-hemolytic streptococcus in 1, and polymicrobial infection in 4 cases. Thirty-nine out of 41 (95%) clinically evaluable patients cured and all (34/34) bacteriologically evaluable patients eradicated their pathogens after treatment with sulbactam/ampicillin. Side reactions were seen in five patients; one maculopapular skin rash, one hemolytic anemia, two diarrhea, and one liver function impairment plus leukopenia. All these reactions were transient and did not require interruption of therapy. These results indicate that sulbactam/ampicillin is safe and effective in the treatment of common pediatric infections beyond the neonatal period.
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PMID:A clinical evaluation of sulbactam/ampicillin in the treatment of pediatric infections. 263 93

Forty-nine evaluable patients with advanced or recurrent endometrial carcinoma who were no longer controllable with surgery, radiotherapy, and hormonal therapy and who had not received prior chemotherapy were treated with cisplatin 50 mg/m2 intravenously every 3 weeks. Two complete responses (4%) and eight partial responses (16%) were observed among the 49 patients. Twenty-two (45%) exhibited stable disease for at least 2 months, while 17 patients (35%) progressed less than 2 months after initiating chemotherapy. Adverse effects included mild leukopenia (31%), nausea and vomiting (72%), and mild azotemia (51%). Only 2 patients experienced life-threatening toxicity; one related to renal failure and the other to sepsis and shock. Cisplatin thus has definite activity when given at the dose and schedule tested to patients with endometrial carcinoma who have not received prior chemotherapy.
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PMID:Phase II trial of cisplatin as first-line chemotherapy in patients with advanced or recurrent endometrial carcinoma: a Gynecologic Oncology Group Study. 270 69

Simple hematological tests, TLC, DLC, mESR, platelet count, were performed in 128 neonates of which 50 were controls and 78 were cases of suspected septicemia. Thirty three had positive blood cultures and were taken as 'proved' and remaining as 'probable' sepsis. A band cell neutrophil (B/N) ratio of greater than 0.2 was most sensitive index (92%) followed by raised mESR of greater than 8 mm for 1st hour, whereas leukopenia of greater than 5 x 10(3)/mm3 was most specific index (88%) for the diagnosis of sepsis. Thrombocytopenia of less than 1.5 x 10(5)/cu mm was also taken as positive test for sepsis. A combination of three positive tests had highest positive predictive accuracy (94%) for early diagnosis of sepsis, when compared to single test or two positive test combinations. The best combination of tests was B/N ratio, leukopenia and mESR which can be easily done in a side laboratory.
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PMID:Simple hematological tests for diagnosis of neonatal sepsis. 275 32

Twenty patients with focal malignant obstruction of the major bile ducts (6 cholangiocarcinoma, 8 colorectal, 3 hepatoma, 2 unknown primary, and 1 gastric cancer) were treated on a protocol examining the toxicity and efficacy in relieving jaundice of external beam radiation therapy (4500 cGy in 300 cGy fractions) combined with continuous hepatic arterial (15 patients) or peripheral venous (5 patients) fluorouracil infusion. Toxicity of this regimen consisted of anorexia with mild nausea and vomiting in 55% of patients and gastric ulceration (responsive to medical management) in 15% of patients. One patient exhibited transient grade 2 hepatic toxicity and one had asymptomatic grade 4 leukopenia. Of 14 patients treated without prior biliary drainage, 8 exhibited a decrease in bilirubin levels from a mean of 14.5 mg/dl to 1.5 mg/dl. Four of six patients with biliary drainage catheters at the start of treatment were able to have them removed without reobstruction. For the 8 responding patients among those who did not have cholangiocarcinomas, the median response duration was 5 months with a median survival from treatment of 6.5 months. For the 4 responding patients with cholangiocarcinoma, the median response duration was 16 months with a median survival from treatment of 20 months. All responders did not have a return of jaundice due to reobstruction of the major ducts (until death or to the present). All responders who have died did so due to tumor progression outside of the treated field except for one who died of unrelated causes. The mean number of proven or presumed episodes of cholangitis per patient was virtually identical in those without (1.8) and those with stents/tubes (1.4, p = 0.561). This regionally focused combined modality cytotoxic therapy was able to relieve obstruction in the majority of patients without excess morbidity (including a lack of any detectable increase in sepsis). Thus, it appears feasible to consider randomized studies of this cytotoxic approach versus standard mechanical drainage procedures to define the relative risks and benefits of each.
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PMID:Combination chemo-radiation therapy for jaundice due to focal malignant obstruction of the major bile ducts. 277 30

The clinical symptomatology of bacterial septicemias was analysed in 417 patients of a University Hospital in West Berlin. Sepsis was caused by Gram-negative organisms in 229 cases, and by Gram-positive bacteria in 177 cases; 11 cases presented with a mixed type sepsis involving both Gram-positive and Gram-negative pathogens. With the exception of a drop in blood pressure, observed appreciably more often in Gram-negative infections (42.4% of the cases as compared with only 25.4% in the case of septicemia due to Gram-positive organisms, (p less than 0.01), no significant clinical differences were seen between Gram-negative and Gram-positive sepsis. Pathophysiological changes (thrombopenia, leukopenia, coagulopathies) that are considered classical reactions to endotoxin, were also observed in Gram-positive infections. The overall prognosis of septicemia was determined largely by the severity of the underlying pathological condition.
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PMID:[Infection caused by gram-positive and gram-negative bacteria. A comparative study]. 279 23


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