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Query: UMLS:C0243026 (
sepsis
)
52,417
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A circulating
lupus
anticoagulant factor was detected in a 38-year-old man with end-stage renal disease and a '
lupus
-like' syndrome with a diffuse proliferative glomerulonephritis. When treated with steroids, the '
lupus
' complications were controlled and the anticoagulant factor disappeared; however, renal function did not recover and the patient commenced regular haemodialysis. Four months later the patient received a cadaver kidney transplant. At transplantation and during follow-up there was neither clinical nor laboratory evidence of
lupus
activity, but 19 months after transplantation, when steroids were tapered to a low dose, the
lupus
anticoagulant factor was detected, and renal-vein thrombosis complicated by
sepsis
led to the patient's death. A membranous glomerulonephritis was found on autopsy. This is the first time in which a (probably 'de novo') membranous glomerulonephritis has been detected in the allograft of a patient with circulating
lupus
anticoagulant factor.
...
PMID:Allograft membranous glomerulonephritis and renal-vein thrombosis in a patient with a lupus anticoagulant factor. 314 30
A 56-year-old woman with a 12-year history of systemic lupus erythematosus presented with severe optic-disc swelling and blepharitis. At the same time, she developed acute pancreatitis and ultimately died of gram-negative
sepsis
. Although it appeared that the ocular and systemic disorders were manifestations of
lupus
, her serum antinuclear antibody and complement levels remained normal throughout her hospital course. Optic neuritis may be secondary to
lupus
, but the diagnosis is difficult to make when the serology is negative.
...
PMID:Lupus optic neuritis with negative serology. 320 10
Critical conditions had been established in 21 (23.1%) of 91 patients with systemic connective tissue diseases for a 12 year period: renal failure (most often),
sepsis
, pericarditis with cardiac tamponade, hemorrhagic diathesis, terminal arteritis with gangrene, gastrointestinal perforations with peritonitis, etc. The corticosteroids applied in high doses and predominantly parenterally and the immunosuppressors are the main drugs used in the treatment of these conditions. Plasmapheresis when possible is a useful supplement. The prognosis of the acute critical conditions depends mainly on the affected organ (more favorable in pericarditis with tamponade and unfavorable in renal failure and gastrointestinal perforations with peritonitis (and on the basic disease) more optimistic in systemic
lupus
erythematodes and very pessimistic in nodal periarteritis and other allergic vasculitis).
...
PMID:[The problems of treating acute critical states in diffuse connective tissue diseases]. 321 40
In 18 of 20 patients with psychosis secondary to systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), autoantibodies to ribosomal P proteins were detected by immunoblotting and measured with a new radioimmunoassay using a synthetic peptide as antigen. The frequency of anti-P was not increased in patients with other central nervous system manifestations of SLE (3 of 20, by radioimmunoassay), in patients with transient behavioral abnormalities due to SLE (none of 8), in patients with psychosis who did not have SLE (none of 13), or in normal controls (none of 20). In four of five paired serum samples, anti-P-peptide antibody levels increased 5-fold to 30-fold during the active phase of
lupus
psychosis. Longitudinal studies of anti-P activity in two patients with psychosis revealed that anti-P levels increased before and during the active phases of psychosis but not during
sepsis
or other exacerbations of SLE, and that the elevations were selective for anti-P antibodies, as opposed to anti-DNA antibodies. Longitudinal studies of anti-P activity in two patients with anti-P but without psychosis showed less than threefold changes in anti-P levels despite exacerbations of disease. We conclude that anti-P is associated with
lupus
psychosis and that synthetic peptide antigens may be useful for the detection and measurement of autoantibodies to intracellular proteins.
...
PMID:Association between lupus psychosis and anti-ribosomal P protein antibodies. 349 38
The causes of death were examined in patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) who were cared for at the University of California, San Francisco and who died after 1969. Of the 44 deaths analyzed, 33 patients had autopsies. Infections were common and often determined to be the cause of death. Overall, infections were present in 55 percent (22/44), and judged to be a cause of death in 30 percent (13/44) of all deaths. The infections could be divided into 2 groups: those due to common bacterial organisms and those due to opportunistic infections. These two types of infections occurred with similar frequency. When compared to common bacterial infections, however, the opportunistic infections were more likely to be first diagnosed at autopsy (p = .001). In only 3 of the 15 patients with an opportunistic infection was the diagnosis made antemortem. Failure to diagnose an opportunistic infection early occurred when the infection simulated active SLE, and when the possibility of an opportunistic infection was not aggressively investigated. The most common opportunistic infections were Candida albicans and Pneumocystis carinii. The most common site of opportunistic infection was the lung. Seventeen patients had 27 common bacterial infections, chiefly
sepsis
from Staphylococcus aureus and aerobic gram-negative organisms. Eight patients had both a common bacterial and an opportunistic infection. Stepwise linear regression analysis showed that death from infection correlated most strongly with prednisone and cytotoxic drug use in the 3 months before final admission. No measure of
lupus
activity was found to correlate with death from infection, except that hypocomplementemia correlated with death from bacterial infections.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Fatal infections in systemic lupus erythematosus: the role of opportunistic organisms. 362 46
A case of excessive heparin requirement during cardiopulmonary bypass is reported. A patient with
sepsis
secondary to a myocardial abscess require 13.5 mg x kg-1 of heparin to increase his activated coagulation time to a therapeutic level. This phenomenon might be due to individual variability,
lupus
vasculitis, septicaemia, repeated thromboembolic phenomenon with hypercoagulable state, or chronic disseminated intravascular coagulation with partial antithrombin deficiency.
...
PMID:Excessive requirement for heparin during cardiac surgery. 723 24
Non-resolved chronic pulmonary thromboembolism is a frequent cause of pulmonary hypertension. In long-standing disease hypertension is progressive due to intimal and medial changes in the perfused vessels. Non-resolution of thromboemboli is often associated with underlying coagulopathies; the presence of a
lupus
anticoagulant may pose a significant problem in the peri-operative management of these patients. Pulmonary thrombendarterectomy presents an efficient option of treatment which is feasible in the majority of patients. By means of pulmonary angiography and computed tomography operability is verified by the often difficult recognition of thromboembolic changes in the central pulmonary arteries. Patients with solely peripheral thromboembolic changes or primary pulmonary hypertension must be excluded. In presence of significant exertional dyspnea and/or pulmonary pressure elevation surgery is indicated. Mortality is high and mainly related to unrelieved pulmonary hypertension or pulmonary complications; pulmonary reperfusion edema, respiratory failure or pneumonia and
sepsis
. In all survivors the reduction of pulmonary hypertension is highly significant and persistent. Thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension may be treated curatively in most patients by thrombendarterectomy. Correct selection of surgical candidates is mandatory, and the patients should preferably be diagnosed and undergo surgery in an early stage of their disease.
...
PMID:[Surgical treatment of thromboembolism-induced pulmonary hypertension]. 786 94
Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is the most common of the connective tissue disorders and can involve virtually any organ in the body. It is associated with pleuropulmonary manifestations in well over 50% of cases. Pleuritis with or without pleural effusion is the most common manifestation and can be particularly troublesome to manage but is rarely life-threatening. More serious manifestations in the lung include acute
lupus
pneumonitis with or without alveolar haemorrhage, chronic
lupus
pneumonitis and pulmonary hypertension. These all contribute significantly to overall mortality in SLE. The association between SLE and the antiphospholipid syndrome, leading to venous thrombosis and pulmonary embolism, is well recognized. Up to 20% of all cases of SLE present in childhood and many of these have pulmonary features at presentation or during the course of their illness.
Sepsis
is one of the main causes of death in SLE and pulmonary
sepsis
in these often immunocompromised patients contributes a significant proportion. Several drugs can produce a clinical syndrome that has many of the clinical and immunological features of SLE. Pleuritis may be seen in up to half of these cases of drug induced SLE. The development of SLE and conditions such as sarcoidosis or asbestosis in the same patient may represent a simple coincidence but there is some evidence for a closer association between these disorders.
...
PMID:Systemic lupus erythematosus. 851 77
Sixty-five abdominal computed tomography (CT) scans of 54 systemic
lupus
erythrematosus (SLE) patients were retrospectively evaluated together with their clinical records. This was to assess the spectrum of CT findings and to determine the value of abdominal CT in this group of patients. Over a 3.5-year period, abdominal CT scans had been requested for suspected renal vein or inferior vena cava thrombosis (n = 52, 80%),
sepsis
, mesenteric ischaemia, Conn's syndrome, evaluation of hepatosplenomegaly, portal hypertension and hydronephrosis. The most frequent indication for CT was suspected renal vein thrombosis (RVT). An SLE patient with previously stable renal function who rapidly develops nephrotic syndrome with deteriorating renal function has an increased risk of thromboembolic phenomenon. Also, renal vein thrombosis is difficult to diagnose clinically and prompt anticoagulation can help preserve remaining renal function. Of these with suspected RVT, two had RVT only and five had thrombosis in both renal veins and inferior vena cava. Two patients had CT features strongly suggestive of mesenteric ischaemia, one had bilateral hydronephrosis thought to be secondary to
lupus
cystitis and CT confirmed two abdominal abscesses. Other incidental CT findings were: subscapular renal haematoma, overall enlargement or diminution of renal size, serositis, bowel wall thickening, splenic, hepatic and pancreatic enlargement and mild para-aortic lymphadenopathy. Abdominal CT revealed many diverse findings and aided the management of these SLE patients.
...
PMID:Abdominal computed tomography in systemic lupus erythematosus. 911 46
Lymphohistiocyte activation syndromes associated with the Epstein-Barr virus and characterized by activation and proliferation of T-cells and macrophages reflecting an inappropriate response of the host to the viral infection. The clinical manifestations are often alarming symptoms suggestive of severe
sepsis
. Most patients have a known underlying disease (hemopathy,
lupus
, Still's disease, HIV infection, bone marrow or organ transplantation). In the few cases that occur in the apparent absence of any risk factors, investigations should be done to look for a predisposing inherited disease, such as familial lymphohistiocytosis of Purtilo syndrome in boys. The treatment rests on immunosuppressive agents followed by bone marrow transplantation, which can provide a definitive cure in genetic forms.
...
PMID:[Lymphohistiocyte activation syndromes associated with Epstein-Barr virus]. 924 35
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