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Query: UMLS:C0243026 (
sepsis
)
52,417
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 80 year-old male was transferred to our department on 18th Aug. 1988, for high fever and clouding of the consciousness. He had been treated with steroid hormone (betamethasone 3.0 mg/day for 15 days) for his
uveitis
. Enterococcus faecium was isolated from both blood and spinal fluid, and then Strongyloides sterocoralis was revealed both in the sputum and stool. Anti-Human T-cell leukemia virus 1 (HTLV-1) antibody was also positive serologically. At first, beta-lactam antibiotics were used for the treatment of purulent meningitis and
sepsis
, but after performing sensitivity tests for E. faecium, the antibiotics were changed to rifampicin (RFP), fosfomycin (FOM) and ofloxacin (OFLX) for their excellent activity against the organism. After the clinical symptoms, subsided, thiabendazole was used for disseminated strongyloidiasis in daily doses of 2,500 mg for six days initially. The drug was used three times with two week intervals. Both bacterial and parasite infections subsided and no recurrence has been noticed until now. This is the first case of meningitis caused by E. facium complicated with strongyloidiasis.
...
PMID:[A case report of meningitis and sepsis due to Enterococcus faecium complicated with strongyloidiasis]. 262 87
Whipple's disease is a systemic disease which may virtually affect any organ system, but in many cases it involves the small intestine causing gastrointestinal symptoms. The differential diagnosis is difficult since symptoms may be nonspecific. We report the case of a 44-year old white male patient with a history of migrating arthralgia and chronic fatigue. The patient newly developed an
uveitis
and underwent a vitrectomy; the further clinical work-up including gastroscopy with intestinal biopsy revealed no sufficient diagnosis. Subsequently, the patient's condition deteriorated with marked weight loss, fever and progressive weakness. An anaerobic
sepsis
with a corynebacterium was confirmed and with i.v.-antibiotics the patients's condition improved markedly. The further examinations disclosed enlarged mesenteric lymph nodes and the involvement of other organs (endocard, liver). CT-guided biopsy only showed fatty degeneration, but operative adenectomy confirmed Whipple's disease. The patient remained without relapse on long-term antibiotic treatment with doxycycline until today. Obviously, in our case the intestinal biopsies failed to detect Whipple's disease after the successful initiation of antibiotic treatment. In the absence of gastrointestinal findings and with concomitant secondary diseases the definitive diagnosis can be difficult. In addition, the previous
uveitis
and the endocardial involvement are most interesting.
...
PMID:[Masked course of Whipple disease with uveitis, infection, endocardial involvement and abdominal lymphomas--case report and review of the literature]. 754 42
Nine eyes of 7 patients with endogenous Klebsiella endophthalmitis are presented. Five patients were diabetic and 4 had
sepsis
arising from the hepatobiliary system, one from the urinary tract and another from the lung. The most classical sign of pupillary hypopyon was present in 5 eyes. Five eyes were initially misdiagnosed and treated as inflammatory
uveitis
. Five eyes finally had no light perception, one eye had 6/60, another had 6/36 and two eyes of one patient recovered 6/6 vision. The successful outcome of this patient achieving 6/6 vision in either eye can be partly attributed to an early diagnosis and appropriate management. A high index of suspicion may improve visual outcome in such cases.
...
PMID:Endogenous Klebsiella endophthalmitis--a case series. 757 38
Analysis of the synovial fluid is the major investigation of monoarthritis. Appearance, viscosity (low if inflamed), cell number and differential, presence of crystals or organisms are all relevant. If septic arthritis is suspected, culture of other sites such as blood, urine, sputum etc. is essential, and may alone yield the organism. If mycobacterium is possible, synovial membrane staining and culture is usually necessary. Gonococcal may be lost in culture if the specimen is not immediately processed. Partially treated
sepsis
may produce sterile culture, and early work suggests that P.C.R. may diagnose these cases. Other investigations such as erythrocyte sedimentation rate, C-reactive protein indicate inflammatory activity, though they are not specific. Antibodies such as antinuclear antibodies, rheumatoid factors lead towards an "autoimmune" disease diagnosis, that do not alone measure activity. Specific antibodies to virus e.g. parvovirus may be diagnostic. The monoarthritis must be seen in the total patient context, where often clues e.g., asymptomatic
uveitis
(in juvenile chronic arthritis) and psoriasis may give the diagnosis.
...
PMID:[Laboratory diagnosis of monarthritis: how much, what for, when?]. 850 31
Radical-scavenging antioxidants, as part of the cellular defense system, function to inhibit the formation and propagation of free radicals and active oxygen species formation. In previous studies we demonstrated that endotoxin lipopolysaccharide (LPS) promotes oxidative stress and associated pathological changes in a rat model and that use of selected antioxidants was effective in reducing LPS-related lipid peroxidation product formation in the liver, as well as LPS-related pathological changes in different organs. In this study, several toxicological parameters (ie, clinical signs, blood chemistry, and histopathological changes) were compared among groups of male New Zealand rabbits injected with LPS following prophylactic pretreatment with either of 2 antioxidants, a group injected with LPS without pretreatment with antioxidants, groups injected with either of the 2 antioxidants only, and an untreated control group. The antioxidants used were a water-soluble natural antioxidant (NAO) from spinach and the NADPH oxidase inhibitor, apocynin. Exposure to LPS alone was associated clinically with depression, tachypnea, outer ear vasodilation, and iris congestion; biochemically with a significant increase in blood total bilirubin, transaminase activity, and glucose, total cholesterol, and triglyceride levels; macroscopically with multiple whitish areas in the liver; and histologically with hepatocellular focal necrosis and acute inflammation, thymic and splenic lymphoid necrosis and depletion, acute
uveitis
and hemorrhages in the ciliary processes, and decreased adrenal cortical cytoplasmic vacuolation considered consistent with depletion of steroidal hormone contents. The NAO had more effective prophylactic capacities than the apocynin. The protective effects were obvious in all investigated parameters. The results indicate the possible therapeutic efficacy of NAO in the treatment of clinical endotoxemia associated with gram-negative bacterial
sepsis
that is known to be associated with oxidative stress.
...
PMID:The prophylactic effects of natural water-soluble antioxidant from spinach and apocynin in a rabbit model of lipopolysaccharide-induced endotoxemia. 1093 47
The impressive anti-inflammatory effects of the tumor necrosis factor (TNF)alpha blockers etanercept and infliximab have led to their use in multiple inflammatory diseases besides their original indication, rheumatoid arthritis (RA). The well-studied clinical effects of both agents in RA are the reduction of signs and symptoms of joint inflammation as well as the arrest of bone destruction. Infliximab has also been Food and Drug Administration-approved in the treatment of Crohn disease; etanercept is now FDA-approved for juvenile chronic arthritis and psoriatic arthritis. Favorable initial clinical trials have been reported in other rheumatic diseases, including ankylosing spondylitis and adult Still disease. In addition, TNF alpha blockade is being studied in the treatment of
uveitis
, myelodysplastic syndromes, and graft-versus-host disease. Studies in
sepsis
and septic shock have identified small subsets of patients that may benefit from TNF alpha blockade, but broader use in septic patients has not improved survival. The TNF alpha blockers have had relatively infrequent serious side effects, especially compared with the immunosuppressive and cytotoxic agents otherwise employed to treat these diseases. Further studies of optimal dosing, combination with other therapies, and long-term benefits and side effects will emerge from future trials.
...
PMID:New indications for treatment of chronic inflammation by TNF-alpha blockade. 1258 32
The complete nucleotide sequences of three human echovirus (EV) 11 strains and one EV19 strain, all of which caused outbreaks of enterovirus
uveitis
(EU), a new infant disease first identified in 1980 in Siberia, were determined. One EV11 strain which caused an outbreak of
sepsis
-like disease in Hungary was also sequenced. All four EV11 strains were mosaic recombinants of the prototype EV11 strain Gregory, with their non-structural coding regions and 5' NTRs being more similar to other prototype enteroviruses (EV1, EV9). However, this finding is probably a feature of all circulating enterovirus strains and may not be related to their altered virulence. A full genome sequence comparison of the three subtypes of EU-causing strains excludes the role of recent recombination in their emergence, and points to their independent emergence.
...
PMID:Recombination in uveitis-causing enterovirus strains. 1476 4
Enterovirus
uveitis
(EU) is a new infant eye disease that was first detected and identified in Russia in 1980-1981. Three subtypes of human echoviruses (EV19K, EV11A, and EV11/B) caused 5 nosocomial outbreaks of EU in different Siberian cities and towns in 1980-1989, by affecting more than 750 children mainly below one year of age. Sporadic and focal EU cases (more than 200) were also retrospectively diagnosed in other regions of Russia and in different countries of the former Soviet Union. There were following clinical manifestations: common symptoms of the infection; acute
uveitis
(rapid focal iridic destruction, pupillary deformities, formation of membranes in the anterior chamber of the eye); and in 15-30% of cases severe complications, cataract, glaucoma, vision impairments.
Uveitis
strains EV19 and EV11 caused significant
uveitis
in primates after inoculation into the anterior chamber of the eye, as well as
sepsis
-like fatal disease with liver necrosis after venous infection. The
uveitis
strains are phylogenetically and pathogenetically close for primates to strains EV19 and EV11 isolated from young children with
sepsis
-like disease. The contents of this review have been published in the Reviews in Medical Virology, 2004, vol. 14, p. 241-254.
...
PMID:[Acute enterovirus uveitis in infants]. 1607 33
A recent outbreak of Streptococcus suis infection associated with the slaughter, preparation or consumption of pigs in Sichuan, China has led to concerns that similar outbreaks could occur in other Asian countries. Although the pig farming industry is flourishing in Taiwan, reports of S. suis infection remain rare. We report 2 cases of S. suis meningitis successfully treated with ceftriaxone and penicillin. Previous reports of S. suis infection from the English literature are reviewed and the clinical data of cases reported in Asian and European countries are summarized. In Europe, there was good correlation between clinical disease and porcine contact, while few cases in Asia reported this association. Meningitis remained the most common presentation of infection in both areas (84.6% and 75.2%, respectively), followed by
sepsis
(15.4% and 18.6%, respectively), which had a higher mortality rate, particularly for splenectomized patients. Other clinical presentations included enteritis, arthritis, endocarditis, pneumonia, spondylodiscitis, endophthalmitis,
uveitis
and peritonitis. Deafness was a distinct sequelae (50.5% in Europe and 51.9% in Asia) after recovery from S. suis infection, especially in patients with meningitis. Not all commercial identification systems for streptococci could offer adequate speciation for S. suis. When viridans group streptococci are isolated from patients with meningitis and
sepsis
, prompt and correct identification of isolates to the species level should be performed, especially in areas with a high prevalence of S. suis diseases.
...
PMID:Streptococcus suis infection. 1621 Nov 37
A 56-year-old man with chief complaints of reduced visual acuity in the left eye and an 8-day history of pyrexia was diagnosed with
uveitis
at a nearby hospital, and was referred and admitted to our hospital. Two days after admission, he complained of dyspnea. Chest X-ray revealed an infiltrative shadow in the right middle pulmonary field and right pleural effusion. Chest CT revealed multiple peripheral nodules and a wedge-shaped shadow with a cavity and feeding vessel. Klebsiella pneumoniae was isolated from the blood, and he was diagnosed with septic pulmonary embolism. In addition, ciliary injection and hypopyon of the right eye were recognized, and he was therefore diagnosed with endogenous endophthalmitis due to
sepsis
. With antibacterial therapy, the symptoms, imaging findings, and inflammatory reaction inproved, but visual acuity did not. This was a rare case of septic pulmonary embolism accompanied by endogenous endophthalmitis.
...
PMID:[A case of septic pulmonary embolism with endogenous endophthalmitis in a healthy adult]. 1851 92
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