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Query: UMLS:C0243026 (
sepsis
)
52,417
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Myocardial performance in critically ill patients is primarily responsive to the need to supply O2 to the periphery. An increase in CO is the common finding in an acute illness characterized by an increase in systemic VO2 (for example,
sepsis
and trauma), since acute variations in flow are the most efficacious mode of augmenting systemic O2t to match the VO2. The lower systemic VO2 of a patient with an acute cardiac illness explains why the CO in this disease is not as elevated as that found in the acutely ill patient with
sepsis
or trauma. Endogenous compensatory mechanisms used to vary flow according to the need for O2t include heart rate, ventricular preload, contractility, and afterload. An increase in LV contractility and a reduction in afterload facilitate LV
stroke
volume, hence O2t. Conversely, pulmonary hypertension may result in a restriction of LV preload if RV pump failure ensues. Other factors relevant to the care of the critically ill that will decrease LV preload--and thus reduce the heart's left-sided adaptation to maintain O2t--include the presence of underlying cardiac disease, which will limit any necessary increase in contractility, and the use of PEEP, which will restrict venous return to the RV. Therapeutic intervention is required when O2t does not balance systemic VO2 and arterial lactate levels rise. The use of resuscitative fluid to improve flow by the Frank-Starling (preload) mechanism may be limited by the compliance properties of either ventricle, but it is a reasonable first choice, with guidelines for administration determined by the PCWP, which influences fluid flux across the pulmonary microvascular exchanging membrane. Vasodilators may be used to increase CO by reducing impedance to ventricular ejection; they may also improve LV compliance, thereby allowing the administration of more fluid (that is, increasing preload) without an untoward rise in the PCWP. If vasodilators are without effect or are potentially dangerous because of concomitant hypotension, inotropic support to increase O2t is required. A brief summary of interventional pharmacologic support in acute illness is depicted in Figure 8.
...
PMID:Myocardial function in the critically ill: factors influencing left and right ventricular performance in patients with sepsis and trauma. 390 47
Escherichia coli endotoxin (ET) was administered to adult rats by continuous IV infusion from a subcutaneously implanted osmotic pump (Alzet). Myocardial function was assessed after 6 and 30 hr of ET infusion and compared with control rats which received a saline infusion and were fasted to match the anorexia of ET rats. Cardiac output (CO) and coronary blood flow, measured by the radiolabeled microsphere method, and mean arterial blood pressure, heart rate, total peripheral resistance, and
stroke
volume, were determined in vivo. Treatment differences were limited to a 13% lower arterial pressure in ET rats after 30 hr of infusion. Myocardial function was evaluated in vitro in similarly treated rats with the isolated perfused working heart preparation; preload was altered by raising the left atrial filling pressure (LAFP) from 10 to 30 cm water. After both 6 and 30 hr of infusion, hearts from ET rats exhibited a significantly lower peak systolic pressure (PSP), CO, and coronary flow in response to increasing LAFP, and a greater oxygen consumption per unit of myocardial work (CO X PSP). Reduced in vitro work performance of hearts from endotoxemic rats was demonstrated early in the course of chronic endotoxemia and in the absence of in vivo evidence of cardiac dysfunction. Myocardial dysfunction, masked in vivo by compensatory mechanisms used to maintain adequate cardiovascular function, may be an important feature in the pathogenesis of both experimental endotoxemia and clinical gram-negative
sepsis
.
...
PMID:Myocardial dysfunction in a nonlethal, nonshock model of chronic endotoxemia. 390 71
The surgical management of severely symptomatic newborn infants with tetralogy of Fallot and absent pulmonary valve has been controversial, and the results of a variety of operative approaches have not been satisfactory. We report on a technique for the treatment of these patients, which consists of (1) ligation of the main pulmonary artery to eliminate pulmonary regurgitation, excessive right ventricular
stroke
output, and secondary pulmonary artery dilation and airway obstruction and (2) insertion of a subclavian-pulmonary artery polytetrafluoroethylene shunt to provide pulmonary blood flow. The procedure was used in four neonates. Two patients operated on at 2 and 3 days of age are doing well 15 and 19 months postoperatively. The other two, operated on at 3 and 4 weeks of age after unsuccessful prolonged medical treatment and positive-pressure ventilation, failed to show long-term improvement and died of
sepsis
and respiratory failure 3 and 5 months after operation. This experience, though limited, suggests that early surgical intervention to control pulmonary regurgitation prevents progressive pulmonary artery dilatation and secondary bronchial compression, decreases the need for prolonged preoperative and postoperative ventilation, and improves the outcome of these critically ill neonates.
...
PMID:Surgical approach to severely symptomatic newborn infants with tetralogy of Fallot and absent pulmonary valve. 395 78
Plasma fibronectin concentrations were significantly (P less than 0.001) below the reference range in dogs with disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) secondary to nonlymphomatous neoplasia, acute necrotizing pancreatitis,
sepsis
, chronic active hepatitis, and heat
stroke
. There was no statistical evidence of a group effect. Decrease in fibronectin concentration was associated with severe DIC, although no attempt was made to correlate fibronectin concentration with prognosis. These findings parallel those reported for severely ill human beings with diseases associated with DIC. They exemplify the potential of spontaneous diseases in animals as models for the study of human disease.
...
PMID:Plasma fibronectin concentrations in dogs with disseminated intravascular coagulation. 400 93
Haemodynamic data were obtained in 26 patients with hepatic failure admitted to the intensive care unit of the First Department of Medicine, Vienna University. There was a significant increase in heart rate (101 vs 78 beats/min) and decreased diastolic pressure (56 vs 71 mm Hg) as compared with healthy persons. The cardiac index was elevated (5.1 vs 3.5 l/m2) and the total peripheral resistance was lowered (621 vs 1130 dyn/sec/cm-5). The systolic blood pressure was within the normal range except in 8 patients whose illness was complicated by
sepsis
. In those 8 patients the systolic blood pressure (86 vs 128 mm Hg), the diastolic blood pressure (42 vs 61 mm Hg) and the total peripheral resistance (434 vs 764 dyn. sec. cm-5) were all decreased as compared with patients with hepatocellular disease without
sepsis
. The decreased total peripheral resistance, however, was not associated with a further increase in the heart rate or
stroke
volume. On the contrary, in these 8 patients the left ventricular performance was lowered. The increase in cardiac output was not associated with an increase in oxygen consumption in patients without
sepsis
. Oxygen consumption was increased in patients with hepatocellular insufficiency and
sepsis
(157 ml/m2 vs 123 ml/m2) and this was accompanied by a diminished oxygen extraction rate (16% vs 26% in these 8 patients.
...
PMID:[Circulatory behavior of patients with liver insufficiency]. 401 42
Septic shock may be defined as a clinical entity wherein a patient has an inadequate peripheral metabolism in the presence of circulating bacteria. The demands for metabolic requirements of the tissues and hence for oxygen transport to these tissues are then markedly high. The average response to increased metabolism in such patients is a percentage increase in cardiac output that is comparable to the percentage increase in oxygen consumption while oxygen extraction rate does not change or even decreases in severe or/and advanced septic shock. This emphasizes the high priority placed by the body on the ability to increase blood flow from the heart in the presence of increased metabolic demands due to
sepsis
. Concerning the myocardium, oxygen consumption is low in hyper- and hypodynamic states of septic shock, probably and partially due to marked arterial vasodilatation. However, in hypodynamic states, the lower value of perfusion pressure may account for a decrease in myocardial oxygen supply, especially in subendocardial areas and may be responsible for myocardial ischaemia, more especially as myocardial oxygen extraction as well as systemic oxygen extraction is impaired. The goal of therapeutics is to improve oxygen availability through: (1) maintenance of haemoglobin levels and (2) increases in
stroke
volume using inotropic drugs since these drugs may produce a rise in myocardial oxygen supply higher than their drug-induced increase in oxygen requirements in hypodynamic states of septic shock.
...
PMID:Oxygen consumption during septic shock. Effects of inotropic drugs. 608 41
The cases of 135 consecutive elderly patients 70 years old or older who had valve replacement and related surgical procedures from October, 1977, through April, 1982, were reviewed. There were 75 men and 60 women. The mean left ventricular ejection fraction was 50.16 +/- 5%. The overall operative mortality was 8% (11 patients). The early operative deaths were related mainly to cardiac failure, low cardiac output,
sepsis
, and renal and multiorgan failure. To assess the operative risk, these 135 patients were compared with 312 younger patients (less than 70 years old) who had undergone similar procedures during the same period. The operative mortality in this group was 5.2% (16). In-hospital complications included arrhythmia (13%), psychosis (7.4%), respiratory failure (6.7%), renal failure (6.7%),
cerebrovascular accident
(5.2%), myocardial infarction (4.4%), and reoperation for bleeding (2.2%). Wound dehiscence occurred in 1.5% of the patients, and pulmonary emboli and
sepsis
developed in 0.7%. Of these complications, only the incidence of
cerebrovascular accident
appeared to be more common in the elderly group (5.2% versus 2.8%), but it had no statistical significance (p = 0.18). A follow-up of 3,892 patient-months was completed in 98.4% of the survivors. There were 8 late deaths (6.4%). Six were related to the valve or to ongoing cardiovascular disease. Thirty-four patients subsequently required medical attention: 4 had bleeding because of the anticoagulant; 3 required a blood transfusion; and 27 were hospitalized. Six were admitted for related cardiac conditions and 7, for observation of other conditions; 14 underwent surgical procedures not related to the cardiovascular system.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Should valve replacement and related procedures be performed in elderly patients? 633 51
Hemodynamic and respiratory effects of a continuous 5-h intravenous infusion of live Escherichia coli were studied in rats. Control animals were infused with saline. Rats infused with 1.8 +/- 0.4 X 10(10) bacteria/h did not survive a 5-h infusion. These animals developed early hypotension and reduced cardiac output (CO) measured by thermal dilution technique. Rats infused with 8.0 +/- 0.4 X 10(9) bacteria/h survived a 5-h infusion with hypotension and reduced CO occurring later in the course of bacteremia. Heart rate was markedly elevated in both septic groups. Arterial blood gas measurements revealed that partial pressure of O2 was not affected by bacteremia, but partial pressure of CO2 was significantly decreased. Arterial pH remained within the normal range indicating respiratory compensation of a metabolic acidosis. Since hypotension and reduced CO were accompanied by a fall in right atrial pressure (RAP) during bacteremia, a third septic group was studied to evaluate cardiac performance during volume loading. After 3-5 h of bacteremia, a 40% reduction in CO was associated with a significant drop in arterial pressure and RAP. Despite volume loading, ventricular
stroke
work and arterial pressure were significantly reduced compared with control animals. The results indicate that severe gram-negative bacteremia produces myocardial depression in the rat. This model can be useful for further studies of cardiac dysfunction during
sepsis
.
...
PMID:Cardiopulmonary response of the rat to gram-negative bacteremia. 636 87
In a prospective randomized study of treatment for early-stage Hodgkin's disease presenting above the diaphragm, 76 patients had staging by laparotomy (Group I) and 28 had staging by closed techniques (Group II). Treatment consisted of involved-field radiotherapy alone (44 patients), involved-field radiotherapy followed by chemotherapy (38 patients), total nodal radiotherapy alone (15 patients), or total nodal radiotherapy followed by chemotherapy (seven patients). On presentation, both groups had similar clinical features and similar treatment distribution. With similar follow-up (87 months), no significant differences in remission or survival were observed between Groups I and II: remission 59 versus 68 percent; survival 74 versus 92 percent; p value 0.27 and 0.09, respectively. Multiple areas of relapse were more frequently observed in Group I (11 of 32 had relapse) as compared with Group II (none of nine had relapse, p less than 0.082). In Group I, relapse in the abdomen was observed as an isolated event or as part of disseminated relapse in 12 percent of patients compared with 3 percent (one patient) in Group II with abdominal relapse alone. Seven patients in Group I and two patients in Group II died with Hodgkin's disease. Six other patients in Group I died with complete remission of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (one patient), leukoencephalopathy (one patient),
sepsis
during chemotherapy (two patients), myocardial infarction (one patient), and
cerebrovascular accident
(one patient). Three other patients in this group had other secondary malignancies successfully controlled (histiocytic lymphoma, squamous cell carcinoma of the cervix, and malignant schwannoma). No second primary lesions or death with complete remission were observed in Group II. Staging laparotomy with splenectomy in early-stage Hodgkin's disease did not improve the duration of remission or survival or decrease the number of abdominal relapses compared with closed staging.
...
PMID:Staging laparotomy and splenectomy in early Hodgkin's disease. No therapeutic benefit. 638 Feb 86
The relationship between plasma levels of thromboxane A2, radioimmunoassayed as thromboxane B2 (TxB), and cardiopulmonary dysfunction in graded bacterial
sepsis
was investigated. Five adult female pigs under anesthesia were intubated and allowed to breathe room air spontaneously. Femoral arterial, venous, and pulmonary artery catheters were inserted. After a 60-minute control period Aeromonas hydrophila (1.0 X 10(9)/ml) was infused intravenously at 0.2 ml/kg/hr, gradually increasing to 4.0 ml/kg/hr over 4 hours. Arterial and mixed venous blood gases, hemodynamic measurements, and TxB plasma concentrations were obtained during the control period, at 10, 20, 30, 45, and 60 minutes and at 30-minute intervals thereafter. Cardiac index increased significantly from control at 20 minutes, remained above control levels for 1 hour, and then declined to significantly low values at 150 minutes. TxB was increased from control at 20 minutes, rising to four times control at 120 minutes. Mean arterial pressure, pulmonary capillary wedge pressure, left ventricular
stroke
work, paO2, and pvO2 decreased significantly during the experiment. Pulmonary artery pressure and pulmonary vascular resistance increased significantly. Changes in TxB were significantly cross-correlated with changes in cardiac index, pulmonary vascular resistance,
stroke
volume, left ventricular
stroke
work, and paO2. TxB elevations led the cross-correlated variables by 0 to 60 minutes. Pulmonary vascular resistance cross-correlated with mean arterial pressure and cardiac index. TxB is increased early in graded bacterial
sepsis
. Changes in TxB appear to precede impaired cardiopulmonary function. The data suggest that TxB is involved in the detrimental hemodynamic effects of early septicemia.
...
PMID:Thromboxane interaction with cardiopulmonary dysfunction in graded bacterial sepsis. 648 30
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