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

Classic sepsis is characterized by the presence of bacteria in blood originating from a primary infection site with secondary location at other sites. Some infectious diseases like typhoid and paratyphoid fever, brucellosis an others share this pathogenetic mechanism but have a characteristic clinical course and usually a good prognosis. After analyzing the differences between the 2 types the author proposes the terms "non specific" and "specific" for each type of sepsis, respectively. The differences between the 2, the organism involved and different reaction of the host in types, may be related to different pathogenetic effects of each case.
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PMID:[Classification of septicemias. A clinical and pathogenic approach]. 134 May 59

Salmonella can produce bacteremia and disseminated disease, including infection of the intrauterine contents and fetal death. Published experience with salmonella infection in pregnancy has involved typhoid; however, nontyphoid gastroenteritis may also produce sepsis and fetal loss. We present a case of second-trimester fetal death associated with group C1 salmonella sepsis. The literature suggests that early diagnosis and treatment of salmonella infection during gestation is associated with a good pregnancy outcome. We recommend that pregnant women with diarrheal illnesses be evaluated by stool culture for salmonella infection.
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PMID:Salmonella sepsis and second-trimester pregnancy loss. 156 77

Lipid profile is known to alter in patients with severe sepsis, but few studies regarding the status of lipid levels in enteric fever are available. Twenty patients with enteric fever, belonging to different age groups and both sexes, along with an equal number of matched patients with fever due to non-enteric causes, were studied with regard to alterations in lipid profile. We observed a severe and protracted hypertriglyceridaemia, decrease in HDL-cholesterol levels and increase in LDL-cholesterol levels in patients with enteric fever at the peak of fever. The values returned to normal on recovery and convalescence. This study serves to highlight the complexity of lipid variation during Salmonella typhi infection.
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PMID:Lipid profile in enteric fever. 188 95

Babies, on admission into a neonatal ward at the Lagos University Teaching Hospital, had their rectal swab specimens examined bacteriologically and screened for enteric bacterial pathogens over a one-year-period at two-week intervals. It was found that on the average there were 3 (9.68%) enteric bacterial pathogens out of an average of 31 admissions at each screening period. The enteric bacterial pathogens isolated included: non-typhoid salmonellae, which accounted for 55 (80.88%) isolates out of the 68 enteric bacterial pathogens, Salmonella typhi 2.94%, Shigella dysenteriae 2.94%, Shigella flexneri 4.41%, S. boydii 1.47%, S. sonnei 1.47%, Campylobacter jejuni 1.47% and Enteropathogenic Escherichia coli (EPEC) 2.94%. The main clinical conditions associated with those babies in whom the enteric pathogens were isolated included sepsis, prematurity, neonatal jaundice and tetanus. It is concluded that the enteric bacterial pathogens, even though they were not directly associated with diarrhoeal disease in the newborns in this study, might have contributed to other illnesses like sepsis and meningitis. It is also noteworthy that the enteric bacterial pathogens isolated sporadically from the babies could have been over-looked in view of the fact that it is not conventional to search for enteric bacterial pathogens in babies without diarrhoea on admission. Rectal swab investigations could provide additional information which might be of epidemiological importance in ill neonates in the clinical settings that prevail in developing countries.
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PMID:Screening of children for enteric bacterial pathogens in the outborn neonatal ward in Lagos, Nigeria. 191 94

The plasma kallikrein-kinin system is activated in Gram-negative sepsis and typhoid fever, two diseases in which bacterial products have been shown to initiate inflammation. Because a single intraperitoneal injection of bacterial cell wall peptidoglycan-polysaccharide polymers from group A steptococci (PG-APS) into a Lewis rat produces a syndrome of relapsing polyarthritis and anemia, we investigated changes in the role of the kallikrein-kinin system in this model of inflammation. Coagulation studies after injection of PG-APS revealed an immediate and persistent decrease in prekallikrein levels. High-molecular-weight kininogen levels decreased significantly during the acute phase and correlated with the severity of arthritis. Factor XI levels were decreased only during the acute phase. Antithrombin III levels remained unchanged, indicating that neither decreased hepatic synthesis nor disseminated intravascular coagulation caused the decreased plasma contact factors. Plasma T-kininogen (an acute phase protein) was significantly elevated during the chronic phase. PG-APS failed to activate the contact system in vitro. Thus the kallikrein-kinin system plays an important role in this experimental model of inflammation, suggesting that activation of this system may play a role in the pathogenesis of inflammatory bowel disease and rheumatoid arthritis in which bacterial products might be etiologically important.
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PMID:Role of kallikrein-kinin system in pathogenesis of bacterial cell wall-induced inflammation. 199 42

A number of studies have evaluated the efficacy of the new fluoroquinolones for therapy of bacterial enteric diseases and for prevention of gram-negative sepsis in granulocytopenic patients. The success of the quinolones in these settings is related to several special features of these agents, including their spectrum of activity and high fecal levels, which are in turn reflected in their effect on the gastrointestinal flora. Other factors that are important, particularly for invasive disease such as typhoid fever and shigellosis, include good intracellular and bowel wall penetration, and lymph node and systemic drug concentrations many times higher than the MICs of the causative organisms. This article reviews the factors that contribute to the changes in fecal flora, and the results of clinical studies in patients with diarrhea, granulocytopenic patients, and patients with selected other infections of, or related to, the gastrointestinal tract.
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PMID:Quinolones and the gastrointestinal tract. 269 30

Thirty hospitalized patients (22 men and eight women), aged between 15 and 41 years (mean = 25.4 years), with severe proven typhoid sepsis were treated with pefloxacin at daily dose of 1200 mg, divided in three doses, intravenously for the first five days and orally for the following ten days of treatment. All patients completely recovered from infection and pathogens were eradicated after 30 days of follow-up. In none of the patients was a relapse registered during the follow-up or enteric carrier state after disease. Pefloxacin therapy was well tolerated by all patients: in five patients a mild and transient epigastric pain and in one patient a mild and transient nausea were registered. Pefloxacin is a safe and effective agent for therapy of typhoid fever.
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PMID:Clinical experience with pefloxacin in the therapy of typhoid fever. 271 62

A retrospective review of 108 consecutive patients with perforated typhoid enteritis managed operatively over a 4-year period at Baptist Medical Centre, Ogbomoso, Nigeria is presented. There were 75 males and 33 females with an average age of 19.7 years. Presenting symptoms were fever, abdominal pain, vomiting, and either diarrhea or constipation. One hundred patients (93 percent) underwent debridement of the perforation and two-layer bowel closure. Postoperative morbidity included intraabdominal abscess, wound dehiscence, and subsequent bowel perforation. Most of the 35 deaths (32 percent mortality) were attributed to overwhelming sepsis which progressed despite aggressive operative management and antibiotic administration. The key to improved survival in this deadly disease lies not in a better operation or improved perioperative care but in the prevention of typhoid fever by providing safe drinking water and improved sanitation methods for all of the global community.
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PMID:Perforated typhoid enteritis: operative experience with 108 cases. 292 66

Ciprofloxacin is a new 4-quinolone antibacterial agent with an extended antibacterial spectrum, enhanced potency and the ability to produce therapeutic serum, tissue and urine concentrations after oral administration. Unlike earlier 4-quinolones, it is active against gram-positive cocci and opportunistic organisms such as Pseudomonas aeruginosa. This overview demonstrates that the oral formulation has been shown to be clinically effective in a broad range of urinary and respiratory infections, gonorrhoea, gastro-intestinal infections including typhoid fever, surgical infections, skin and soft tissue sepsis and in a variety of infections caused by Pseudomonas aeruginosa, notably cystic fibrosis. Adverse reactions are infrequent and in almost every case have proved mild and transient. Ciprofloxacin has great potential for the oral therapy of infections which have traditionally required parenteral chemotherapy.
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PMID:Overview of clinical experience with ciprofloxacin. 301 31

The patient who has clinical jaundice, abnormal results on liver function tests, or both presents a difficult diagnostic challenge. Many infectious diseases affect the liver, and the extent of involvement determines the degree of clinically apparent jaundice. Some diseases that affect the liver minimally cause no jaundice at all. An important clue to the cause of the disorder is the pattern of abnormal results on liver function tests. Increased alkaline phosphatase predominates with Q fever, secondary or tertiary syphilis, clonorchiasis, and hepatic candidiasis, while elevated levels of serum transaminases characterize viral hepatitis, leptospirosis, mononucleosis syndromes, legionnaires' disease, typhoid fever, toxic shock syndrome, and yellow fever. Increases in serum bilirubin are typical with jaundice caused by clostridial myelonecrosis, severe bacterial sepsis, and relapsing fever (borreliosis). These findings together with the patient's history, physical findings, and basic laboratory tests provide a presumptive diagnosis in most cases.
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PMID:Systemic infections affecting the liver. Some cause jaundice, some do not. 305 Sep 27


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