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Query: UMLS:C0243026 (
sepsis
)
52,417
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Yersinia
is an enterobacterium that causes acute enterocolitis, pseudoappendicitis and
sepsis
. Some patients suffer from post-infectious immunopathological complications, such as erythema nodosum and yersinia arthritis, which are well known. Less information exists concerning the erythema multiforme-like yersinia exanthema, which is a distinctive dermatological disorder with target lesions localized predominantly on the neck, shoulders and arms. These lesions, which may be smaller but often are larger than the iris lesions in conventional erythema multiforme, tend to coalesce into plaques and reveal a papulovesicular component at their periphery. In our cases the exanthema was associated with a conjunctivitis, especially of the nasal part of the conjunctiva. This exanthema can be induced by yersinia enterocolitica, serotype O-3 and type O-9, at least in Europe, whereas serotype O-8 prevails in North America. The most helpful diagnostic criteria are serological data. However, it is crucial to remember that Widal's agglutination reaction gives rise to high titres, whereas the results of the complement-fixation test are often not reliable.
...
PMID:[Yersinia exanthema]. 323 42
A long-term hemodialysis male patient was known to have systemic iron overload due to regular blood transfusions. As he was suspected to have aluminum overload, he received a single intravenous administration of desferrioxamine (that supported the hypothesis). Four days later, he became highly febrile with no focus of infection on physical examination. All blood cultures yielded
Yersinia
enterocolitica. The aim of this case report is to recall the potential risk of
Yersinia
sepsis
in iron overload patients treated with desferrioxamine, even for a short time. The diagnosis should be suspected even in the absence of digestive symptoms, leading to immediate desferrioxamine withdrawal and antibiotic therapy.
...
PMID:Septicemia due to Yersinia enterocolitica in a long-term hemodialysis patient after a single desferrioxamine administration. 323 80
A 50-year-old man with diabetes was found to have
sepsis
with multiple small hepatic abscesses secondary to
Yersinia
pseudotuberculosis which were detected by computed tomography (CT) scan.
Sepsis
with Y. pseudotuberculosis is uncommon but usually seen in patients with underlying liver disease. Those patients with liver abscesses invariably have multiple small abscesses. Widespread use of CT scanning is likely to uncover more cases of hepatic microabscesses; in the appropriate clinical setting, Y. pseudotuberculosis should be considered as a possible cause.
...
PMID:Yersinia pseudotuberculosis sepsis presenting as multiple liver abscesses. 327 8
The purpose of this communication is to report the occurrence of early-onset Pseudomonas aeruginosa
sepsis
and
Yersinia
enterocolitica neonatal infection. This case serves as a reminder of the changing spectrum of neonatal septicaemia.
...
PMID:Early-onset Pseudomonas aeruginosa sepsis and Yersinia enterocolitica neonatal infection: a unique combination in a preterm infant. 356 60
Micronodular pneumonia and persistent
sepsis
with mild symptoms caused by
Yersinia
enterocolitica serotype 3 is described. Two of 4 patients had pneumonia as their only clinical manifestation, while the others had diarrhea as well. Pneumonic changes disappeared quickly during antimicrobic therapy. The course of the disease was fundamentally different from septicaemias caused by other gram-negative bacteria.
...
PMID:Interstitial pneumonia and sepsis caused by Yersinia enterocolitica serotype 3. 373 35
A patient with fatal
Yersinia
enterocolitica
sepsis
was seen recently in our intensive care unit. The patient had received two units of packed red blood cells during a surgical procedure. Cultures of the donor blood yielded Y enterocolitica, and a whole-organism enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay of the donors' sera suggested a recent infection with Y enterocolitica in an asymptomatic donor. Though rare, Y enterocolitica, which can grow at the cold temperatures of refrigerated blood, should be considered as a possible source of
sepsis
following blood transfusion.
...
PMID:Fatal Yersinia enterocolitica sepsis after blood transfusion. 384 Mar 56
A case of severe
Yersinia
enterocolitica septicemia in a hemodialysis patient receiving desferrioxamine (DFX) therapy is reported. The association between systemic
yersiniosis
and DFX chelation therapy is reviewed. The increasing application of DFX chelation, in iron overload states and for aluminium overload in dialysis patients, provides an increasing number of patients at risk for this unusual drug side effect. An awareness of the association between
Yersinia
sepsis
and DFX therapy allows appropriate therapeutic intervention which may prove lifesaving.
...
PMID:Life-threatening sepsis complicating heavy metal chelation therapy with desferrioxamine. 386 44
Our purpose was to study prospectively the causes, routes of infection, and frequency of catheter-related
sepsis
in patients on total parenteral nutrition. From January 1981 to January 1984, cultures of 135 subclavian catheters from 135 adult patients were done by quantitative and semiquantitative methods. Twenty patients (14.8%) had catheter-related
sepsis
. Fourteen episodes (70%) stemmed from an colonized hub. Skin infection (Staphylococcus aureus, 2 cases), total parenteral nutrition mixture contamination (Enterobacter cloacae, 2 cases), and hematogenous seeding of the catheter tip (
Yersinia
enterocolitica, 1 case, and Streptococcus faecalis, 1 case) accounted for the remaining six septic episodes. The catheter hub is, in our experience, the most common site of origin of organisms causing catheter tip infection and bacteremia.
...
PMID:Pathogenesis of catheter sepsis: a prospective study with quantitative and semiquantitative cultures of catheter hub and segments. 392 Feb 39
A fatal case (a 55-yr-old man) of bacterial shock and
sepsis
following a transfusion with erythrocytes infected with
Yersinia
enterocolitica serotype 03, is reported. The blood donor had slight diarrhea 6 days before the blood donation. A serum sample from the donor showed high titre of both IgG and IgM antibodies against Y. enterocolitica 03, indicating a recent infection. Y. enterocolitica 03 was isolated from blood cultures from the patient. The remaining portion of the transfused erythrocyte concentrate also yielded abundant growth of the same organism on direct plating of the material on blood agar indicating that profuse multiplication of the organism had occurred within the transfusion bag during storage at 4 degrees C.
...
PMID:Bacterial shock due to transfusion with Yersinia enterocolitica infected blood. 652 27
We discuss 25 cases of death observed from 1971 to 1983 in a casistic of 155 patients with Thalassaemic Syndrome. Anemia as a cause of death is disappearing, new triggers are involved such as
Yersinia
Enterocolitica who can cause severe
sepsis
even in non-splenectomized patients. Iron overload appears to be the most severe complication in the second decade.
...
PMID:[Critical evaluation of the causes of death in thalassemic subjects]. 654 85
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