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Query: UMLS:C0243026 (
sepsis
)
52,417
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We have reviewed 108 cases of bacterial endocarditis treated surgically since 1968. The mean age of the patients was 47.7 +/- 15.6 years (+/- SD) (range, 14-79 yr). Seventy-seven percent were male. The most common causative organisms were staphylococci (46%), streptococci viridans group (5%), and other streptococci (20%). Forty-five percent, 25%, and 13% of patients had native aortic valve, native mitral valve, or native double valve (AV/MV) involvement, respectively. Eighteen patients had prosthetic valve endocarditis. No patient underwent surgery for tricuspid valve endocarditis. Seventy-three patients were considered to have active endocarditis (AE) (positive blood or tissue cultures and/or annular abscess). The 35 remaining patients had healed endocarditis (HE). Preoperative complications in patients with either AE or HE were stroke (11%, 11%), renal failure (33%, 3%; p less than 0.001),
pulmonary edema
(83%, 34%; p less than 0.001), anemia (36%, 8%; p less than 0.01), and inotrope dependence (22%, 6%; p less than 0.05). Hospital mortality for native valve AE was 19.5% (11/56), and for healed endocarditis, 5.7% (2/35). Independent predictors of hospital mortality were inotrope dependence (p less than 0.001), annular abscess (p less than 0.01),
pulmonary edema
(p less than 0.01), and staphylococcal infection (p less than 0.05). The 5-year actuarial survival for operative survivors was 68.4 +/- 7.5% (AE) and 78.3 +/- 9.2% (HE). We conclude that the operative mortality for patients with continuing
sepsis
is high and that surgery should be undertaken early in staphylococcal endocarditis. If surgery is successful, then the long-term prognosis is good.
...
PMID:The surgical treatment of infective endocarditis. 272 63
Acute hypoxemic respiratory failure (AHRF) can result from diverse lung insults. Toxic oxygen metabolites have been implicated in this clinical condition and in animal models of
pulmonary edema
. Hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), an oxygen metabolite, mediates tissue injury. We measured H2O2 levels by a spectrophotometric technique in the breath condensate of 68 mechanically ventilated patients; 13 patients with normal lungs undergoing elective surgery had no such detectable levels of H2O2. Fifty-five patients in the ICU meeting criteria for the adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) had a higher concentration of H2O2 in the expired breath condensate than ICU patients without pulmonary infiltrates (2.34 +/- 1.15 vs 0.99 +/- 0.72 mumol/L, p less than 0.005). This marker had a sensitivity of 87.5 percent and a specificity of 81.3 percent in separating the two patient populations. Patients with AHRF and focal pulmonary infiltrates who did not meet criteria for ARDS also had higher concentrations of H2O2 (2.45 +/- 1.55 mumol/L) than patients without pulmonary infiltrates (p less than 0.001). No difference was observed between the expired H2O2 concentrations of patients with ARDS or patients with focal pulmonary infiltrates. Patients with brain injury or
sepsis
tended to have higher levels of H2O2 regardless of lung pathology. Increased levels of H2O2 are detected in the expired breath of ICU patients with focal lung infiltrates and in ARDS patients, which is consistent with the hypothesis that oxygen metabolites participate in the pathogenesis of ARDS and other forms of AHRF.
...
PMID:Increased hydrogen peroxide in the expired breath of patients with acute hypoxemic respiratory failure. 276 20
A case of
pulmonary edema
in a 34-year-old pregnant woman on corticosteroids and beta adrenergics yielded an unusual radioaerosol/radioperfusion lung image. The image showed normal perfusion but multiple bilateral penetration defects on the radioaerosol study. Factors contributing to this unique pattern include the combined action of corticosteroids and beta-adrenergic agonists, local airway irritation caused by the drying effect of nebulized oxygen,
sepsis
, or a combination of these factors.
...
PMID:Discordant radioaerosol/radioperfusion in drug-induced maternal pulmonary edema. 279 24
Pulmonary edema
of
sepsis
is a consequence of increased transmural conductance for water and proteins at the level of lung microvessels induced by vasoactive endogenous mediators, liberated after activation of complement by bacterial endotoxins. Intermittent opening of interendothelial junctions at the level of post-capillary venules has been implicated as being the pathway for the leaking plasma proteins and water. Microvascular basement membranes and endothelial cell surfaces have fixed anionic charges (AS) which prevent the escape of plasma proteins from the circulation as well as the adhesion of blood cells to the luminal endothelium. The density distribution of these AS was substantially reduced in visceral and systemic microvessels during murine abdominal
sepsis
. This observation suggest that MOF secondary to
sepsis
is the consequence of a severe and generalized alteration of the microvascular electronegative charge, induced by liberation of inflammatory mediators.
...
PMID:Decreased density distribution of mesenteric and diaphragmatic microvascular anionic charges during murine abdominal sepsis. 284 42
Twenty-four patients with high microvascular permeability
pulmonary edema
were initially treated by means of conventional supportive therapy for 1-12 days. Continued deterioration was treated by predilutional hemofiltration and induced a dramatic improvement in 22/24 patients. Survival was 92%. Sieving coefficients for autacoids and middle molecular weight vasoactive peptides involved in the development of high microvascular permeability
pulmonary edema
were higher than 0.88 indicating that clearing from blood of these peptides during one pass through the hemofilter is similar to that obtained during one pass through the pulmonary normal microvasculature. Hemofiltration seems to be a significant breakthrough in the treatment of ARDS secondary to severe
sepsis
.
...
PMID:Hemofiltration in septic ARDS. The artificial kidney as an artificial endocrine lung. 300 79
The decision to use bedside pulmonary artery catheterization for managing patients must involve a careful assessment of the risks compared to the benefits. Complications can be minimized by following specific guidelines for catheter insertion and maintenance. Pulmonary artery catheterization has been shown to be more accurate than clinical assessment alone in critically ill patients for determining the cause of shock (hypovolemic, cardiogenic, or septic) or for assessing the cause of severe
pulmonary edema
(cardiogenic or noncardiogenic). The diagnosis of cardiac failure in medical or surgical patients with invasive hemodynamic monitoring provides physiologic data that guide pharmacologic treatment that may favorably influence preload and afterload in the failing or ischemic heart. Managing hemodynamics with the aid of pulmonary artery catheterization in patients with the adult respiratory distress syndrome has received considerable attention, but a contribution to better patient outcome has not been established. Similarly, although clinical management of hemodynamic instability in septic shock is facilitated by pulmonary artery catheterization, the mortality remains very high because of the lack of specific therapy to reverse the
sepsis
syndrome. Adequate volume resuscitation and improved tissue oxygenation are universally accepted goals, but specific hemodynamic endpoints are controversial and direct measurements of tissue oxygenation are not possible. Prospective studies to define the clinical value of pulmonary artery catheterization are needed, but must be designed very carefully in order to identify unequivocally the effect of pulmonary artery catheterization on outcome in critically ill patients.
...
PMID:Bedside catheterization of the pulmonary artery: risks compared with benefits. 305 59
Severe falciparum malaria complicated by acute renal failure resulted in very high mortality. Ten patients with acute renal failure from falciparum malaria (infected rbc up to 80%) were continuously dialysed using Tenckhoff peritoneal catheter. Five were oliguric and BUN was maintained between 60 to 80 mg/dl (21.4 to 28.6 mmol/l) by hourly 1 to 1.5 liter dialysate exchange during the acute phase. The peritoneal urea clearance (mean +/- SD) was 12.1 +/- 1.2 ml/min with urea nitrogen removal of 13.4 +/- 2.3 g/day. In nonoliguric cases dialysis was also needed for additional removal of waste products since the remaining renal function could not cope with the hypercatabolic state. Peritoneal glucose absorption (135 to 565 g/day) gave considerable caloric supply without volume load and also contributed to the prevention of hypoglycemia. Varying degree of acute respiratory failure developed in all patients with 5 cases (2 oliguric and 3 nonoliguric) progressing to
pulmonary edema
. Swan-Ganz catheterization and hemodynamic study suggested the role of increased capillary permeability and volume overload from endogenous water formation in the development of pulmonary complication. Continuous removal of fluid and waste products minimized these problems and may prevent the progression of respiratory failure. One patient died of severe
sepsis
and the other nine survived. This study showed the beneficial contribution of continuous peritoneal dialysis in the management of acute renal failure from severe falciparum malaria.
...
PMID:Continuous peritoneal dialysis in acute renal failure from severe falciparum malaria. 312 24
Endotoxin injected intraperitoneally caused leucopenia and
pulmonary oedema
in rats. These effects were spontaneously reversed over the 28 h after the single dose of endotoxin. The pharmacokinetics of three substrates, 14C-sucrose, 3H-prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) and 3H-adenosine, were measured in perfused lungs isolated from rats at different times after treatment with endotoxin. The efflux kinetics of radiolabel derived from sucrose and adenosine were little affected, but that from PGE2 was markedly changed. The metabolism of PGE2 was also decreased. The change in PGE2 pharmacokinetics preceded the
pulmonary oedema
, but both pharmacokinetics and oedema returned to normal at the same time (28 h after endotoxin). It may be feasible to use PGE2 pharmacokinetics as a biochemical index for early warning of acute lung injury caused by
sepsis
.
...
PMID:Effects of endotoxin-induced lung injury on the pharmacokinetics of prostaglandin E2 and adenosine in rat isolated lung. 314 94
Neutrophils have been implicated in the pathogenesis of acute lung injury associated with clinical and experimental
sepsis
. Data from in vitro systems and experimental animals have suggested that neutrophil-derived oxidants, particularly H2O2, may be primarily responsible for endothelial damage, vasoconstriction, and
lung edema
. With the use of endotoxin infusion as an in vivo model of
sepsis
we tested the hypothesis that pretreatment with catalase, a peroxide scavenger, would ameliorate the resultant changes in pulmonary vasoconstriction and lung fluid balance. Paired experiments were performed in 16 goats with chronic lung lymph fistulas. One group of animals (n = 7) received endotoxin first alone and then again, several days later, after pretreatment with Ficoll-linked catalase. As a control, identical experiments were performed in a separate group (n = 6) with Ficoll-linked albumin substituted for Ficoll-catalase. A third group (n = 3) was given endotoxin alone and then again during a continuous infusion of catalase. Plasma and lymph levels of catalase were comparable to or exceeded those previously shown to be completely protective in isolated perfused lung preparations and in vitro systems. Endotoxin caused neutropenia, pulmonary arterial hypertension, decreased cardiac output, and increases in lymph flow to approximately three times base line, with a return of all variables toward control values by 6 h. Catalase pretreatment produced no significant differences in any of these variables. These experiments do not support a role for H2O2 as a mediator of acute lung injury due to endotoxemia.
...
PMID:Effect of intravenous catalase on the pulmonary vascular response to endotoxemia in goats. 328 99
We prospectively evaluated a protocol that included extravascular thermal volume (ETV) as a measure of extravascular lung water (EVLW) instead of pulmonary artery wedge pressure (Ppaw) measurements to guide the hemodynamic management of 48 critically ill patients. Patients were randomized to either a protocol management (PM), or to a routine management (RM) group. In the RM group, EVLW measurements were unknown to the primary care physicians. The 2 groups were similar with respect to age, gender, and severity of illness. In patients with initially high EVLW, EVLW fell to a greater extent in PM than in RM patients (18 +/- 5 versus 4 +/- 8% decrease, p less than 0.05). This difference was even greater in patients with heart failure. No adverse effects on oxygenation or renal function occurred in following the protocol. Mortality for the groups as a whole was similar, but was significantly better (p less than 0.05) for PM patients with initially high EVLW and normal Ppaw (predominantly patients with
sepsis
or the adult respiratory distress syndrome). For both groups, patients with an initial EVLW greater than 14 ml/kg had a significantly greater mortality than did those with a lesser amount of EVLW: 13 of 15 (87%) versus 13 of 32 (41%), p less than 0.05. We conclude that management based on a protocol using EVLW measurements is safe, may hasten the resolution of
pulmonary edema
, and may lead to improved outcome in some critically ill patients.
...
PMID:A prospective study of lung water measurements during patient management in an intensive care unit. 330 70
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