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Query: UMLS:C0243026 (sepsis)
52,417 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Between 6/88 and 8/89 61 critically ill patients (sepsis, ARDS, pneumonia, multiple trauma, etc.) underwent elective percutaneous endoscopic tracheostomy (PET). Following dilation up to 36 Fr. a number 6-10 tracheostomy tube was introduced. The patients were ventilated 17 (2-68 days) before and 28 (4-160) days after PET. One patient died from cardiac arrest, and in 4 patients, because of tube obstruction or cuff defect, reintubation was necessary. Additionally 2 significant infections and a minor bleeding and a emphysema occurred. Elective percutaneous tracheostomy performed in the ICU seems to be a simple and cost-effective procedure.
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PMID:[Percutaneous endoscopic tracheostomy]. 198 39

Endotoxin (lipopolysaccharide [LPS]) and tumor necrosis factor (TNF-alpha) have been implicated in the pathogenesis of sepsis-induced adult respiratory distress syndrome. To evaluate the possible interaction of the hepatic-pulmonary macrophage axis in the adult respiratory distress syndrome, we compared the kinetics of immunosuppressive prostaglandin E2, TNF-alpha, and interleukin 6 production in LPS-stimulated Kupffer cells and alveolar macrophages (AMs). Interleukin 6 production by Kupffer cells was significantly higher than for equal numbers of AMs. Kupffer cell TNF-alpha levels peaked early before decreasing as regulatory prostaglandin E2 levels rose. In contrast, AM TNF-alpha levels rose sharply and remained significantly higher than for Kupffer cells throughout culture coincident with negligible prostaglandin E2 production. Kupffer cell sequestration of LPS may normally invoke a coordinated cytokine response able to locally induce acute-phase hepatocytes. In hepatic failure, however, LPS spillover to the lung may promote adult respiratory distress syndrome by inducing unregulated AM TNF-alpha production within the pulmonary microenvironment.
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PMID:Organ interactions in sepsis. Host defense and the hepatic-pulmonary macrophage axis. 198 33

There is much interest in the relationship between oxygen delivery and oxygen consumption in the critically ill patient. This interest is occasioned by the observation that patients with sepsis and the adult respiratory distress syndrome have a linear or "supply-dependent" relationship instead of the normally observed biphasic or "supply-independent" relationship. These relationships are only valid when subjects are at rest, since during exercise, as VO2 increases, so do DO2 and the oxygen extraction ratio (ER, VO2/DO2). We examined the VO2-DO2 relationship in a group of 16 mechanically-ventilated surgical ICU patients while they were at rest and during activities that increase VO2. At low levels of activity, where mean VO2 increased from 207 +/- 38 (SD) ml/min at rest to 241 +/- 44 ml/min, there were significant increases in mean DO2 but not mean ER. With the greater (greater than 50 percent) increases in VO2 seen with chest physical therapy, there were increases in both DO2 and ER. When the VO2-DO2 relationship during low levels of exercise and rest are plotted, a linear pattern emerges that could be misinterpreted as a "supply dependent" pattern. Therefore, it is important to pay close attention to the activity state of a patient when examining the VO2-DO2 relationship.
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PMID:The oxygen uptake-oxygen delivery relationship during ICU interventions. 198 7

A retrospective review covering a 9-year period revealed 113 patients who underwent 157 major bowel procedures during 130 operations performed solely by gynecologic oncology surgeons. Forty-eight percent of the operations were done for tumor cytoreduction, and 33% were performed for a bowel obstruction. Other indications included colostomy closure, fistula repair, resection for multiple enterotomies, temporary diversions, repair of perforated bowel, treatment for severe proctosigmoiditis, management of ureteral stricture, treatment for vulvar necrosis, and resection of an incidental small bowel tumor. Of the 157 procedures, 44% were colostomies, 32% were bowel resections with reanastomosis, 9% were urinary conduits, 6% were intestinal bypass procedures, 5% were colostomy closures, and 4% were ileostomies. Postoperative complications occurred in 32% of the 130 operations. These included wound infection, death, sepsis, fistula formation, urinary tract infection, unexplained febrile morbidity, anastomotic leakage, stomal infarction, adult respiratory distress syndrome, bowel obstruction, deep venous thrombosis, and wound hematoma. Four of the eight deaths were due to tumor progression, three were from sepsis, and one was from adult respiratory distress syndrome. Of the 130 operations, 89 (68%) were associated with no complications. These data support the concept that gynecologic oncology surgeons are able to perform intestinal operations as therapy for gynecologic malignancies with acceptable complication rates. Since a thorough understanding of the natural history of the cancer, familiarity with alternative therapeutic options, and knowledge of the prognosis are important in making operative decisions, and since gynecologic oncologists are technically capable of performing operations on the small bowel and colon, referral of patients with a primary or recurrent gynecologic malignancy or with a subsequent intestinal complication after initial therapy should be directed to the gynecologic oncologist whenever possible.
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PMID:Intestinal surgery performed on gynecologic cancer patients. 198 13

Basic scientists and clinicians have written numerous articles on the diverse causes of adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). There is no specific diagnostic test for ARDS; the condition is characterized by interstitial lung edema, reduction in lung compliance, alveolar and small airway closure, decrease in functional residual capacity, and persistent hypoxia with increasing amounts of pulmonary blood flow coursing through nonventilated or poorly ventilated alveoli. Recent studies have emphasized the roles of macrophages and polymorphonuclear neutrophils in lung defense and injury. Advances in understanding the pathophysiology of ARDS have produced little significant change in the clinical management of the syndrome. There is no specific treatment for ARDS. The cornerstone of therapy is the early recognition and elimination of initiating factors such as sepsis. ARDS is not a single disease process, but appears to represent a final common pathway for the manifestation of a variety of lung injuries. The goal of therapy is to eliminate the predisposing condition and support the patient. New modes of ventilatory and pharmacologic therapy are presented.
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PMID:Adult respiratory distress syndrome. 199 Aug 78

Without surgical debridement in patients with infected pancreatic necrosis, survival can not be expected. Previous surgical series reported postoperative survival in the range of 50%; however, more recent reports demonstrate improved mortality of 10% to 20%. Despite the demonstrated advances in surgical management, much remains to be done. Ongoing sepsis and the multiorgan failure syndrome (including ARDS, renal, and hepatic failure) are frequently part of the terminal phase of necrotizing pancreatitis, and further declines in mortality await future improvements in supportive therapy for overwhelming sepsis. Finding a means to prevent secondary infection of necrotizing pancreatitis would also have a very significant impact on survival. Defining the various form of severe acute pancreatitis and its infectious complications by dynamic pancreatography and CT-directed aspiration will permit meaningful trials of new methods to treat these unfortunate patients.
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PMID:Current management of pancreatic abscess. 199 28

The purpose of the study was to evaluate the role of tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF alpha) in the pathogenesis of acute lung injury in critically ill patients. An immunoradiometric assay with an upper normal limit of 9 pg/ml was used to measure plasma TNF alpha levels (pl-TNF alpha) in 34 patients with adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) and in 16 patients in whom, despite the presence of risk factors, ARDS did not develop. Pl-TNF alpha was elevated in 76% of the patients with ARDS (71 +/- 104 pg/ml) and in 48% of the at-risk patients (47 +/- 73 pg/ml); the difference between the two groups was not statistically significant. In 13 patients studied serially from the onset (Day 0) to the fifth day of ARDS, the peak pl-TNF alpha occurred later than Day 0 in seven subjects. Although the highest pl-TNF alpha levels were found in septic patients, moderately elevated values were also observed in 56% of nonseptic subjects. We conclude that plasma TNF alpha level is not a marker of ARDS but rather of shock and sepsis. These results do not exclude a pathogenic role of TNF alpha in acute lung injury since this cytokine could be produced and exert its effects within the lungs. The large incidence of abnormally high could be produced and exert its effects within the lungs. The large incidence of abnormally high plasma TNF alpha levels raises important questions on the role of this toxic cytokine in other disorders occurring in critically ill patients.
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PMID:Plasma levels of tumor necrosis factor in the adult respiratory distress syndrome. 200 Oct 71

The adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) is a form of diffuse lung injury associated with multiple risk factors. Patients with severe hypoxemia who meet blood gas criteria defined by the extracorporeal membrane oxygenation trial (ECMO) of 1974 to 1977 have a reported survival of 11 percent. The reported survival has remained unchanged for 15 years despite numerous technologic advances. We prospectively studied ARDS patients who met ECMO blood gas criteria. One hundred seventy-eight ARDS patients were prospectively screened over a 30-month period. Fifty-one of these patients met ECMO blood gas criteria and 23 (45 percent) survived (p less than 0.001 vs ECMO trial). No obvious differences in etiology, APACHE II score, organ system failure, or the incidence of sepsis was found between survivors and nonsurvivors. We conclude that survival of ARDS patients who met ECMO blood gas criteria in our institution is higher than that previously reported from both other centers and our own hospital.
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PMID:Increased survival of ARDS patients with severe hypoxemia (ECMO criteria). 200 1

Pathologic oxygen supply dependency is an abnormal situation in which oxygen uptake (Vo2) varies directly with oxygen delivery. Its presence in patients with adult respiratory distress syndrome and/or sepsis has been associated with particularly high mortality rates that may be the result of tissue hypoxia that causes multiple organ failure. The evidence for this association has been indirect because we cannot use invasive methods that would be necessary to verify or disprove the hypothesis. Because further progress will depend on the development of adequate animal models of pathologic oxygen supply dependency, we have attempted to evaluate some of the available information in this area as well as the likelihood that tissue hypoxia will prove to be the precipitating factor. In anesthetized dogs injected or infused with endotoxin, many of the features of pathologic oxygen supply dependency have been successfully produced. These features include defective peripheral oxygen extraction, increased oxygen demand, and increased lactate levels. Regional measurements have shown that gut Vo2 decreases before other areas, particularly skeletal muscle. Lactate measurements alone were shown not to be sufficient proof of tissue hypoxia. More direct measurements of actual energy states and tissue Po2 are indicated for future research efforts.
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PMID:Experimental models of pathologic oxygen supply dependency. 202 22

Basic therapeutic methods based on early diagnosis of septic ARDS were described. Concerning early diagnosis exertional hypoxemia and increased broncho-vascular markings on chest X-ray were observed in the pre-ARDS stage of septic patients. These findings were also observed in the initial stage of endotoxin-induced pulmonary edema in rabbits and the basic mechanisms were thought to be as follows, based or our experimental studies. The former is related on impairment of alveolar diffusion and the latter reflect increased peri-vascular cuffing due to increase in pulmonary edema. The diffuse infiltrative shadows on the both back area in CT scanning was also a helpful sign indicating the early stage of pulmonary edema. This finding was seen at the stage at which the edematous shadow had not yet appeared on conventional chest X-ray. Increase in serum laminin and decrease in plasma fibronectin were also important biochemical findings predicting ARDS in gram negative sepsis. Using these findings, it is considered that early prediction of septic ARDS is possible. Concerning therapeutic methods based on early prediction, the usefulness of cortico-steroids and the protease inhibitor "Urinastatin" were observed in experimental in vitro and in vivo studies. Some findings induced by endotoxin administration in rats or rabbits, such as the increase in endotoxin in peripheral blood, the distraction of PMN-elastase, the increase in pulmonary lymph flow and mortality within 48 hours were significantly suppressed by simultaneous treatment by corticosteroid. In an in vitro study, PMN superoxide production and elastase release following incubation of endotoxin and PMNs were significantly inhibited by adding a concomitant level of corticosteroid and/or urinastatin.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Sepsis and ARDS]. 203 89


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