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Query: UMLS:C0243026 (sepsis)
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Among 327 surgical repairs of incisional hernias done between 1974 and 1989, 68 repairs (21%) were performed because of a primary treatment failure. Failed primary attempts of cure had been unique in 71%, and multiple in 29% of cases; their procedure had been essentially suture or herniorrhaphy. Site of recurrent incisional hernia (R.I.H.), was midline or lateral incision in respectively 84% and 16% of cases. Size of R.I.H. was considered as large in two third of cases. Operation was performed electively in majority of cases (93%). More than half of the patients were "prepared" by preoperative pneumoperitoneum and/or weight reducing regimen. Mersilene* mesh was used in 81% of cases. Results of treatment of R.I.H. are reported, depending on procedure. Among 55 cures by use of Mersilene* mesh, 1 patient died (from myocardial infarction), and 5 recurrences occurred, 4 of which from sepsis. Study of complications and failures suggests: 1) careful attention to indications, 2) advantages of a large size Mersilene* mesh, 3) attention to preoperative treatment, especially weight loss regimen and progressive pneumoperitoneum.
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PMID:[The repair of recurrent postoperative incisional hernias. Objectives and therapeutic indications (68 cases)]. 214 45

The peripelvic area consists of the bony pelvis, hip joints and adjacent mesenchymal soft tissues. Malignant lesions in this area present unique diagnostic and therapeutic problems, in particular when tumor removal is involved. Between 1986 and 1988 we treated 7 females and a male, aged 8-75 years, for malignant tumors of this area. Diagnoses (histologic) included 4 cases of malignant fibrous histiocytoma, a malignant schwannoma, a Ewing sarcoma, a chondrosarcoma, and an osteosarcoma. Operations included marginal resection (4 cases), radical resection and reconstruction (2), radical resection (1), and modified hemipelvectomy (2). Adjuvant therapy consisted of radiotherapy in 1 case, chemotherapy in 2, and a combination of both in another 2. A patient who underwent radical resection and reconstruction of his left hemipelvis and hip joint died of local infection that progressed to generalized sepsis 2 months after operation. 2 patients died of recurrent disease, 3 and 30 months, respectively, after primary therapy. 1 died of myocardial infarction 20 months after the first and 3 months after the last of a series of marginal resections. 3 patients are alive and well 3-24 months following their first operation, and the fourth is doing well 24 months following first operation and 23 months after resection of lung metastases. Soft tissue sarcomas and osteosarcomas are the most frequent malignant tumors encountered in the pelvis and peripelvic areas. Their varying grades of malignancy and metastatic potential influence the approach on the one hand, while invalidity and compromised quality of life associated with tumor resection, influence it on the other.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Peripelvic tumors: approach and management]. 216 86

Reports of reconstructive surgery for peripheral vascular disease have been relatively uncommon in patients with end-stage renal disease. Between 1980 and 1989, 39 patients with end-stage renal disease underwent revascularization of 56 limbs. Fifty-two primary infrainguinal and four secondary infrainguinal bypass grafts were performed. In addition, nine thrombectomies were performed. At the time of surgery 37 patients were on dialysis; three had functioning kidney transplants. The indications for revascularization were gangrene, rest pain, or ulceration in all except three limbs with disabling claudication. Reversed, nonreversed, or in situ vein was used in 25 of the 52 primary infrainguinal revascularizations performed. Polytetrafluoroethylene was used in 25. Two procedures used a combination of polytetrafluoroethylene and vein. The primary patencies for all infrainguinal procedures at 1 and 2 years were 77% and 68%, respectively. Four perioperative deaths occurred in the infrainguinal group (7.7%). An additional death occurred after thrombectomy for late graft closure. Three deaths were a result of myocardial infarction. One patient on peritoneal dialysis developed uncontrolled sepsis. At 3 years 39% of patients were alive, and 84% of the limbs were salvaged. Among the cases studied no group was identified that represented unacceptable operative risk. Results compared well with reported patencies for patients subjected to infrainguinal revascularization procedures. Limb revascularization in patients with end-stage renal disease may be performed by use of similar criteria to those used for other patients with peripheral vascular disease.
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PMID:End-stage renal disease--is infrainguinal limb revascularization justified? 224 5

Scarcity of small donors results in a high mortality rate for children on liver transplant waiting lists. To alleviate this problem, we have recently started to reduce the size of livers from older donors to use in children. In the last year, a total of 20 liver transplants were performed in 17 patients, including seven reduced-size liver transplants (RSLT) in six children. Mortality on the waiting list has been reduced to negligible amounts compared with a mortality rate of 25% before starting RSLT in patients with acute liver failure or those whose weight was less than 10 kg. Children undergoing RSLT weighed 10.8 +/- 8.5 kg compared with 20.9 +/- 20.3 for all others (NS). Cold ischemia time was significantly longer in the RSLT group (9.5 +/- 3.0 v 6.0 +/- 2.8 hours, P less than .05) as was intraoperative blood loss (9.4 +/- 9.4 v 3.0 +/- 3.5 blood volumes). There was no significant difference in postoperative aspartate aminotransferase and prothrombin time between the two groups. Four children received a RSLT as a primary procedure and three have survived with good liver function. Two patients were retransplanted with RSLT after a failed first transplant and both died of nonhepatic complications. This compares with 11 of 13 survivors in the whole liver transplant group. Causes of death in children who died after RSLT include cytomegalovirus sepsis (2) and myocardial infarction(1).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Early experience with reduced-size liver transplants. 227 30

Multiple levels of aortoileofemoral occlusive disease may necessitate profundoplasty or extension of the outflow anastomosis to insure pelvic and distal arterial perfusion. During the period 1978 through 1988, 1637 patients underwent elective aortic reconstruction for aneurysmal or occlusive disease. One hundred forty-five had profundoplasty performed to ensure adequate outflow. Associated disease was common with 88 (60%) patients having arteriosclerotic heart disease and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) present in 89 (61%) patients. Hypertension and extracranial occlusive disease was found in 68 (46%) and 56 (38%) patients, respectively. The superficial femoral artery was occluded in 108 (74%) patients, while in 17 (12%) the profunda femoris was the only patent artery in the groin. Death occurred in nine patients (6.2%). Three were due to arrhythmias or myocardial infarction and ischemic colitis was the cause of death in two. Renal failure, sepsis, aspiration and cerebral anoxia, and disseminated intravascular coagulopathy accounted for one each. Five graft limbs failed. Amputation was required in one patient, while thrombectomy or distal bypass restored flow in four patients. Seventeen graft limbs in 136 patients occluded during the follow-up period. Distal bypass was successful in four and amputation was required in the fifth patient. Extension of the profundoplasty restored flow in nine limbs, while thrombectomy alone was successful in one. Bilateral amputation was required in one patient with poor run off and insufficient autogenus venous tissue. One hundred fourteen (78.6%) of the 145 patients survived 10 years with patency in 268 of the original 290 limbs at risk (92.4%). Profundoplasty in these patients with multilevel disease seems to extend the long-term patency of aortofemoral grafts and allows return to a normal life-style.
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PMID:Extended profundoplasty to minimize pelvic and distal tissue loss. 235 32

The principle of iron conservation is the basis of iron metabolism; the normal basal loss of iron from the body is about 1 mg daily in a 70 kg man and 0.8 mg in a 55 kg woman. Iron is lost mainly by the menstrual and gastrointestinal routes. The total iron requirement during pregnancy is 800 mg; in the last month the requirement may amount to 7 to 8 mg/day. Supplementary iron is recommended for many menstruating women, and during the latter part of pregnancy. Correct fetal iron metabolism is ensured by proper maternal iron status, although there are contradictory opinions and findings about the relationship between maternal and fetal iron metabolism. Preterm infants fed on breast milk have a negative iron balance, and require an iron intake of about 0.6 mg/kg/day, and 3.4 mg/1 g haemoglobin, to compensate for intestinal and venesection iron losses, respectively. The absorption of supplementary iron by the preterm infant is a linear function of intake. Preterm infants do not require iron supplements when given repeated blood transfusions. During lactation the total iron losses of the mother are 1 mg/day, and thus no supplementary iron is needed if the iron metabolism has been in balance during the pregnancy. Serum ferritin concentration decreases continuously when iron stores in the body are reduced, and totally empty iron stores are the only known reasons for low serum ferritin concentration. Despite depleted iron stores, serum ferritin concentration can be normal or higher than normal in protein-energy malnutrition, up to 3 months after major surgery, in acute liver damage, in some patients with prolonged hyperglycaemia due to diabetes mellitus, in acute lobar pneumonia, active pulmonary tuberculosis and rheumatoid arthritis on gold therapy, in sepsis secondary to marrow hypoplasia induced by chemotherapy, in heavy drinkers and for a few days after myocardial infarction. In haemochromatosis, iron is deposited in liver (producing fibrosis), pancreas, endocrine glands and heart. The rise in the level of iron in the body is due to increased absorption and/or increased intake. This pathology may occur in transfusions, in alcoholism (especially when alcoholic beverages are contaminated with iron and the diet is low-protein), in several liver diseases, in congenital transferrin deficiency and in idiopathic disease. Patients susceptible to haemochromatosis should receive a low-iron diet. Serum ferritin determination may be helpful in early identification of susceptible members of a family with idiopathic familial haemochromatosis, but transferrin saturation is not a good indicator of either iron depletion or iron overload.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Clinical pharmacokinetics of iron preparations. 267 7

Surgical therapy with mapping-guided subendocardial resection was used in 30 patients with drug-refractory ventricular tachycardia. Results of preoperative, intraoperative and postoperative electrophysiologic evaluation and long-term clinical follow-up are reported. Left ventricular aneurysm was located in the inferior wall in 8 patients and in the anterior wall in 22. Left ventricular mapping was performed in 15 patients preoperatively and in all 30 patients intraoperatively. Subendocardial resection was supplemented with cryoablation in 26 patients and with laser photocoagulation in 4. Coronary bypass surgery was performed in 27 patients. The surgical mortality rate was 10%; the three deaths were due to cardiogenic shock, pneumonia and sepsis, respectively. At postoperative electrophysiologic study, ventricular tachycardia was inducible in 8 (30%) of 27 patients. Previously ineffective antiarrhythmic drugs were effective in preventing the induction of ventricular tachycardia in four of these eight patients. Two of the remaining four patients received an automatic implantable cardioverterdefibrillator; the other two were treated with amiodarone. At a mean follow-up period of 18 +/- 17 months (range 1 to 52), there has been one sudden death and one nonfatal recurrence of ventricular tachycardia in the 18 patients without inducible arrhythmias postoperatively. Among the eight patients with inducible ventricular tachycardia after subendocardial resection, there has been one nonfatal ventricular tachycardia recurrence. Thus, among the 27 patients surviving surgery, 17 (63%) were cured with surgery alone, and another 7 (26%) had their ventricular tachycardia controlled with drugs (n = 5) or the defibrillator (n = 2). Inability to completely map the tachycardia, a clinical history of cardiac arrest requiring resuscitation and the presence of myocardial infarction within 2 months predicted postoperative arrhythmia inducibility and recurrence.
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PMID:Surgical therapy for drug-refractory ventricular tachycardia: results with mapping-guided subendocardial resection. 278 95

Over a 10-year period, aortofemoral grafting was employed in the revascularization of 484 limbs in 245 patients with peripheral limb ischaemia. Six patients (2.4%) died in the postoperative period, the most common cause of death being myocardial infarction. Forty-three patients (18%) developed significant non-fatal complications within 30 days of operation, half of whom required further surgery as a consequence. Thirty-seven patients suffered late graft-related complications of which graft thrombosis was the most common. Immediate graft patency was 98.4%, cumulative patency was 95% and 87% at 1 and 5 years respectively. False aneurysm formation was encountered in 3.3% of patients, deep graft sepsis in 1.6% and the phenomenon of 'non-healing' of grafts in 1.2%. Cumulative survival following elective surgery was 97% and 84% at 1 and 5 years respectively, and 89% and 72% for those undergoing limb salvage procedures.
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PMID:Morbidity and mortality after aortofemoral grafting for peripheral limb ischaemia. 281 Jan 85

Our 6-year experience with ventricular assist devices was reviewed to determine variables associated with improved survival. Forty-three patients (mean age 62 +/- 14 years) were supported after balloon pumping and pressors proved inadequate. Twenty-eight patients could not be weaned from cardiopulmonary bypass, 12 patients deteriorated in the intensive care unit after cardiac surgery, and three had a bridged to transplantation. Overall, 47% (20/43) of patients could not be weaned from the ventricular assist devices, and 26% (11/43) were weaned but died before discharge, resulting in a hospital mortality rate of 72% (31/43). The remaining 28% (12/43) of patients were discharged and have survived 9 to 62 months. Early institution of ventricular assist devices (p less than 0.01), use of biventricular support (p less than 0.01), use of ventricular assist devices as a bridge to transplantation (p less than 0.05), and increased operator experience (p less than 0.05) were associated with improved survival. When patient and disease-related variables were analyzed, only age less than 60 years (p less than 0.01) and unexpectedly preoperative myocardial infarction associated with shock (p less than 0.05) were related to improved survival. Death was caused by insufficient ventricular recovery, stroke, multiple organ system failure, sepsis, or a combination of these complications. During long-term follow-up, two patients have died of congestive heart failure, and one is significantly impaired from a stroke. Two other patients are functional class III and seven patients are class I. Although hospital mortality was high (72%), the use of ventricular assist device support resulted in overall "long-term" survival of a significant percentage (28%) of patients, 47% (8/17), in the past 12 months, all of whom would have died without it. Therefore we currently recommend a trial of ventricular assist devices support for most patients who fail to be weaned from cardiopulmonary bypass, deteriorate in the perioperative period, and as a bridge to transplantation. Long-term survival is determined by the complications from ventricular assist devices support and functional status of the remaining myocardium.
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PMID:Mechanical support: assist or nemesis? 281 22

Initially, poor long-term prognosis in patients with SLE and fear of recurrent disease dissuaded renal transplantation in this group of patients. However, in 1975 the Advisory Committee to the Renal Transplant Registry reported satisfactory 1-2-year results in 56 patients with SLE from 36 institutions. Subsequently, renal transplantation for SLE patients with end-stage renal disease has become more accepted, though it has been recommended that transplantation be postponed for at least one year after initiating dialysis. Five cases of recurrent lupus nephritis have been reported in the literature. However, since the long-term outcome after transplantation in this group of patients is not well established, we have examined the long-term outcome in SLE patients who underwent renal transplantation at the University of Minnesota. Thirty-two SLE patients receiving 33 transplants between December 1969 and December 1987 were studied retrospectively and compared with controls matched for age, sex, donor source, HLA match, date of transplant, and diabetic status. A total of 69% (22/32) of patients underwent less than 1 year of dialysis prior to transplantation, and 50% (16/32) experienced biopsy-proved acute rejection, which was reversible in 67% (11/16). Actuarial graft function and patient survival rate in SLE patients were not significantly different from those in the matched control group. Duration of prior dialysis did not affect outcome. Surviving grafts have excellent function as measured by serum creatinine (1.3 +/- 0.4 mg/dl, means +/- SD). Causes of death were sepsis (5) and myocardial infarction (1). One patient lost the graft from rejection after withdrawal of immunosuppression because of a malignancy one month posttransplant. Three patients lost graft function due to chronic rejection. To date no patients have had evidence of recurrent SLE nephritis.
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PMID:Single-center 1-15-year results of renal transplantation in patients with systemic lupus erythematosus. 305 93


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