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Symptom
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Enzyme
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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0243026 (
sepsis
)
52,417
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Severe lactic acidosis has been increasingly reported as a potentially fatal complication of HIV treatment. We report on an asymptomatic HIV-infected woman treated with stavudine, lamivudine and indinavir for one year. She was hospitalized because of progressive dispnoea, oedema, cyanosis and severe lactic acidosis. Arterial blood pH was 6.98, bicarbonate 4.4 mmol/l (normal value 22-26), blood lactate: 29.7 mmol/l (normal value <2.2). Hepatic function was normal. She had an impressively rapid response (within a few hours) to empirical treatment with thiamine (100 mg i.v.). No evidence of
sepsis
or malabsorption were identified and vitamin B1 level was not tested before thiamine infusion. Three months later she was re-started successfully on nelfinavir plus nevirapine. The rapid response to thiamine infusion deserves a careful attention and such an approach should be considered in similar cases as a support treatment of this potentially life-threatening complication of HIV therapy.
Int J
STD
AIDS 2001 Jun
PMID:Severe lactic acidosis and thiamine administration in an HIV-infected patient on HAART. 1136 26
Pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) is a spectrum of inflammatory disorders of the female genital tract involving at least the endrometrium and may include the fallopian tubes, ovaries, and pelvic cavity. Over 1 million women each year are treated for PID in the United States, and it is one of the most serious infections diagnosed in women due to its sequelae. Women with PID acutely experience pain and are at risk for
sepsis
; however, the significant increases in ectopic pregnancy and infertility are the most disturbing long-term complications. It most often is initiated with an infection by a
sexually transmitted disease
, but can also involve a variety of pathogenic aerobes and anaerobes secondarily.
...
PMID:Outpatient management of pelvic inflammatory disease. 1211 50
Some 250 million cases of
sexually transmitted disease
(
STD
) occur each year, and in some countries 1 or even 2 women in every 10 are infected with an
STD
.
STDs
are likely to reach an advanced stage before women notice them. The consequences of
STDs
are devastating, according to a report by the Population Information Program of the Johns Hopkins School of Public Health, and they include stillbirths, blinding eye infections in the newborn, chronic female abdominal pain, ectopic pregnancy, and infertility. There are social consequences for women such as divorce, and husbands may abandon infertile wives. Gonorrhea and chlamydia can cause both severe inflammation of the pelvis with acute pain and possible infertility. Pelvic inflammatory disease can permanently scar the fallopian tubes, increasing the risk of ectopic pregnancy, which can be fatal when the fallopian tube ruptures. Babies born to mothers with gonorrhea and chlamydia are likely to develop eye infections that may make them blind. Chlamydia infection in pregnant women may also cause premature rupture of the membranes,
sepsis
, and the death of premature neonate. Infection may spread to the lungs of newborns, leading to chlamydial pneumonia. Syphilis can cause spontaneous abortion, stillbirth, neonatal death, or congenital syphilis in the infant. Trichomoniasis and herpes can also be transmitted from mother to fetus. And infection with an
STD
increases the risk of infection with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). The World Health Organization (WHO) recommends that prenatal care should always include checks for
STDs
. A WHO Technical Working Group on Care of Mother and Baby has stressed the importance of detecting and treating
STDs
in pregnant women. The working group urged training of health workers to distinguish between
STDs
and other infections. The group, which met July 5-9, 1993, outlined health center strategies for prevention and treatment.
...
PMID:STDs infect 250 million a year. 1234
To identify prognostic indicators of survival at different CD4 cell levels, independent of highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART), among injection drug users (IDUs). A community-recruited cohort of injection drug users followed semiannually from 1988 through 2000. Five partially overlapping subcohorts were defined by when participants first reached a CD4 cell level of 351 to 500, 201 to 350, 101 to 200, 51 to 100, or </=50 cells/microL. Prognostic factors were measured at entry into each category. Kaplan-Meier survival estimates for HIV-related death and Cox regression models were constructed by CD4 category. Among the 1030 HIV-infected IDUs, survival improved in the HAART-era with hazard ratios 0.42, 0.36, 0.24, 0.21, and 0.25, respectively, for CD4 cell groups of 500 to 351, 350 to 201, 200 to 101, 100 to 51, and </=50 cells/microL. Shorter survival was associated with prior hospitalization, AIDS, and
sexually transmitted disease
, with similar effects in the pre-HAART and HAART eras. For the lowest CD4 cell level, prior
sepsis
or endocarditis, outpatient/emergency room visits, and alcohol use provide additional prognostic value. Survival among HIV-infected IDUs improved since the introduction of HAART, even though utilization of HAART was incomplete. Clinical and behavioral variables provided prognostic information about survival, including substance use indicators.
...
PMID:Prognostic factors for survival differ according to CD4+ cell count among HIV-infected injection drug users: pre-HAART and HAART eras. 1560 29
A profoundly immunosuppressed HIV-infected man developed
sepsis
syndrome with multi-organ failure. A septic screen failed to identify a bacterial or fungal cause and despite empirical treatment for these pathogens the patient remained unwell. Investigations revealed disseminated tuberculosis. With specific anti-tuberculosis therapy the patient rapidly recovered. Although most cases of
sepsis
syndrome in HIV-infected patients are due to bacteria, tuberculosis should be added to the differential diagnosis of this presentation.
Int J
STD
AIDS 2006 Aug
PMID:Septic shock and multi-organ failure in HIV infection-'sepsis tuberculosa gravissima'. 1692 7
A 30-year-old HIV-infected intravenous drug user presented with
sepsis
, acute renal failure, oedema, proteinuria and iron deficiency anaemia. After extensive investigation, a diagnosis of reactive systemic AA (amyloid, serum amyloid A protein) amyloidosis was made on the basis of renal, gastric and duodenal biopsies.
Int J
STD
AIDS 2007 May
PMID:Renal and gastrointestinal amyloidosis in an HIV-infected injection drug user. 1752 3
Kaposi's sarcoma (KS) usually presents with typical skin lesions. We report two cases that presented with illnesses suggesting major
sepsis
, but were found to have disseminated KS at postmortem with little in the way of cutaneous involvement.
Int J
STD
AIDS 2007 Nov
PMID:Septic illness and Kaposi's sarcoma. 1800 17
This study was designed to describe the epidemiology and risk factors for nosocomial infection (NI) in a Brazilian neonatal intensive care unit (NICU). This study was a retrospective cohort from January to December, 2003. All neonates admitted to the NICU. Infection surveillance was conducted according to the NNIS, CDC. Chi-square test and logistic regression model were performed for statistical analyses. The study was conducted at a public, tertiary referral NICU of a teaching hospital in the Northeast of Brazil. A total of 948 medical records were reviewed. Overall NI incidence rate was 34%. The main neonatal NI was bloodstream infection (68.1%), with clinical
sepsis
accounting for 47.2%, and pneumonia was the second most common NI (8.6%). Multivariate analysis identified seven independent risk factors for NIs: birth weight, exposure to parenteral nutrition, percutaneous catheter, central venous catheter or mechanical ventilation, abruptio placentae and mother's
sexually transmitted disease
(
STD
). Neonates from mothers with
STD
or abruptio placentae, those weighing less than 1,500 g at birth or those who used invasive devices were at increased risk for acquiring NI.
...
PMID:Risk factors for nosocomial infection in a Brazilian neonatal intensive care unit. 1855 19
Tigecycline belong to glycylcycline antibiotics. This new group of antibiotics was derived from lipophilic tetracyclines but differs from them by higher effectivity, lower affinity to bacterial resistance mechanisms, and very long half-time. Tigecycline is registered for treatment two groups of infections: skin and soft tissue infections and complicated intra-abdominal infections. Nevertheless, its therapeutic use probably can be enlarged to pneumonia,
STD
, infections caused by multi-resistant Helicobacter pylori, subacute and chronic infections associated with biofilm formation, and serious infections caused by intracellular pathogens (serious brucellosis, Q-fever, rickettsial infections). By contrast, tigecycline seems not appropriate for treatment
sepsis
and similar acute life-threatening bacterial diseases.
...
PMID:[Tigecycline: Its position between other antibiotics, features, clinical usage]. 1939 24
With improved survival, more AIDS patients, especially heavy smokers and alcohol abusers, may be confronted with laryngeal squamous cell carcinoma. Since curative treatment may require aggressive combined therapy, these patients, often suffering from immunosupression and poor general condition, present unique therapeutic challenges. The objective of the study was to describe treatment dilemmas. This case report presents a detailed description of an AIDS patient with carcinoma of the larynx. A patient with T3N0M0 laryngeal carcinoma and AIDS underwent tracheotomy and biopsy, followed by severe neck and pulmonary infection. After convalescence, radiotherapy was administered, with no evidence of a disease during a 3.5-year follow-up. During his remaining life, the patient developed severe psychoaffective disorder, his immune state deteriorated until he demised from
sepsis
. In conclusion, patients with HIV infection, especially having a history of tobacco or alcohol abuse, should be carefully examined for head and neck carcinoma that is likely to be more aggressive. Following surgery, AIDS patients may have worse wound healing and a greater tendency to contract infections. Radiotherapy and especially chemotherapy may cause life-threatening complications. Although early detection may increase survival, curative treatment should involve many disciplines and extra caution.
Int J
STD
AIDS 2009 Aug
PMID:Laryngeal cancer in acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. 1962 96
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