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Query: UMLS:C0243026 (sepsis)
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The goal of this study was to develop and validate clinical prediction rules for bacteremia and subtypes of bacteremia in patients with sepsis syndrome. Thus, a prospective cohort study, including a stratified random sample of 1342 episodes of sepsis syndrome, was done in eight academic tertiary care hospitals. The derivation set included 881 episodes, and the validation set included 461. Main outcome measures were bacteremia caused by any organism, gram-negative rods, gram-positive cocci, and fungal bloodstream infection. The spread in probability between low- and high-risk groups in the derivation sets was from 14.5% to 60.6% for bacteremia of any type, from 9.8% to 32.8% for gram-positive bacteremia, from 5.3% to 41.9% for gram-negative bacteremia, and from 0.6% to 26.1% for fungemia. Because the model for gram-positive bacteremia performed poorly, a model predicting Staphylococcus aureus bacteremia was developed; it performed better, with a low- to high-risk spread of from 2.6% to 21.0%. The prediction models allow stratification of patients according to risk of bloodstream infections; their clinical utility remains to be demonstrated.
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PMID:Predicting bacteremia in patients with sepsis syndrome. Academic Medical Center Consortium Sepsis Project Working Group. 939 66

In surgery, deep-seated fungal infection is not rare. In our institute, fungal infection was analyzed during postoperative periods. As pathogen, fungus was the second frequent pathogen after the operations for esophageal cancer and gastric cancer, and the third pathogen after hepatobiliopancreatic cancer and colon cancer. Furthermore, fungus was found more frequently pathogen from distant infection than that from local foci. Especially in CV catheter sepsis, fungus was main pathogen (60 %). In order to inhibit CV catheter sepsis, nutrition support team (NST) has been induced in our institute for prevention of external pathway of fungus. After NST, the frequency of CV catheter sepsis decreased from 12 % to 3.6 %, and the isolated frequency of fungus in catheter sepsis patients also decreased from 84 % to 16 %, respectively. It demonstrates that the activity of NST successfully prevents the external pathway of fungus in CV catheter indwelling patients. However, internal pathway (fungal translocation) still remains, and that issue has to be overcome. Molecular biological technique was applied for diagnosis of fungemia. PCR-RFLPs was performed by using specific primer of 18s rRNA in V4 region. Clinical samples were applied for PCR-RFLPs, and antifungal therapy was performed according as the results of PCR-RFLPs. It indicated that molecular biological technique was useful for diagnosis of fungemia.
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PMID:[Deep-seated fungal infection in surgery]. 979 64

To understand the etiology and clinical outcome of bacterial and fungal sepsis in patients with advanced human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection in Taiwan, we conducted a prospective study of nonmycobacterial bacteremia and fungemia in HIV-infected patients with fever who were admitted to a university hospital in Taiwan during a 42-month period. Of 210 patients, 41 (19.5%) had a total of 52 episodes of sepsis due to nonmycobacterial bacteria or fungi, or both (15.5% of 336 episodes of fever). All but one patient had acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS), and the mean CD4 lymphocyte count was 29/microL (range, 0-321/microL). A total of 57 pathogens (39 bacteria and 18 fungi) were isolated from blood; polymicrobial sepsis due to both bacteria and fungi occurred in four episodes. Nontyphoid Salmonella (NTS) was the most common cause of community-acquired bacteremia (24/30, 80%). Staphylococcus aureus bacteremia was diagnosed in three episodes while Streptococcus pneumoniae bacteremia was found in only one. Cryptococcus neoformans was the most common cause of fungemia and was responsible for 12 episodes, while fungemia due to Penicillium marneffei and Histoplasma capsulatum, two emerging fungi in Taiwan, were diagnosed in four cases and one case, respectively. Nine episodes, eight of bacteremia and one of candidemia, were nosocomial. The overall in-hospital mortality was 29%, and nosocomial sepsis was associated with a higher mortality rate (56%, p = 0.02). The mean duration of survival after recovery from initial sepsis was 426 days. We conclude that NTS bacteremia was the most common cause of sepsis in patients with advanced HIV infection in Taiwan and clinicians caring for such patients should watch for emerging fungal infections. Nosocomial sepsis was associated with a high mortality rate. The mean survival duration after recovery from sepsis of our patients was short.
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PMID:Bacteremia and fungemia in patients with advanced human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection in Taiwan. 983 Feb 79

A retrospective review of 100 liver transplantations in 98 children was performed to determine the incidence of infection caused by Candida organism in these patients and to identify risk factors that may predispose to serious fungal infection. Thirty-one infections caused by Candida organisms developed during the initial 28 days posttransplantation: 19 were definite invasive infections (one deep site or one positive blood culture), 2 were probable invasive infections (three superficial sites), and 10 were urinary tract infections. Eleven of 19 patients had fungemia or a disseminated infection (two noncontiguous deep organs involved and/or positive blood cultures) and 8 of 19 had peritoneal candidiasis. Infection caused by Candida organisms was a contributing factor to mortality in 7 of 21 patients (case fatality rate of 33%) with invasive infection. Risk factors that were predictive for invasive infection by univariate analysis included the following: pretransplantation antibiotic therapy, length of transplant operation, transfusion requirement, number of days in the intensive care unit, number of days intubated, number of concurrent bacterial infections, number of antibiotics administered, number of laparotomies performed posttransplantation, retransplantation, hepatic artery thrombosis, bile leaks, and renal and respiratory failure. By logistic regression analysis, bile leak, hepatic artery thrombosis, preoperative steroid use, transfusion requirement, and the number of days intubated were identified as independent risk factors for invasive infection caused by Candida organisms. The use of prophylactic antifungal agents in high-risk patients may be important in reducing the serious morbidity and mortality associated with sepsis caused by Candida organisms in pediatric liver transplant recipients.
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PMID:Candida infection in pediatric liver transplant recipients. 987 87

Sepsis is a condition at high risk for the patients to develop organ(s) or system dysfunction/failure and represent a very limiting process for survival. Researchers and clinicians proposed standardization of terminology for sepsis and related problems to improve communication and to evaluate the efficacy of preventive measures and therapeutic interventions. Interrelationship among systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS), infection and sepsis are surrounded by non infectious satellite events such as trauma, burns, pancreatitis, haemorrhagic shock, immune-mediated organ injury and infectious cause such as fungemia, parasitemia, viremia. The prevalence of infections among intensive care patients has been reported to vary from 15 to 40%. Usually indicators of sepsis are persistent hyperlactatemia and supranormal level of DO2. These conditions may progress as a sort of dynamic process known as endotoxaemia condition which is mediated by derangement of biohumoral factors inducing immunological dissonance and ultimately concomitant or sequential organs dysfunction/failure. Multiple sources of sepsis is a phenomenon clearly associated with poor prognosis and all the sepsis trials managed in the last decades have failed on reducing mortality rate in enrolled patients. Development of scoring system routinely used at bedside represent an important method to establish cost-effectiveness in this exiting area of study and clinical management. Controversial results on sepsis need a sort of consensus at different level from researchers to clinician experiencing new strategies for prevention and more appropriately therapeutic approach for the management of this syndrome.
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PMID:Sepsis and organ dysfunction/failure. An overview. 1047 40

A prospective analysis of 43 episodes of Pseudomonas aeruginosa bacteremia in HIV-1-infected subjects was performed and the results compared with the incidence and outcome of Pseudomonas aeruginosa bacteremia in other high-risk patients, such as transplant recipients, leukemia patients, or patients hospitalized in the intensive care unit. The incidence of bacteremia/fungemia as a whole and of gram-negative and Pseudomonas aeruginosa bacteremia in particular was greater in HIV-1-infected subjects than in the unselected general population admitted. In contrast, the incidence of Pseudomonas aeruginosa bacteremia in HIV-1-infected patients did not differ from that in patients with other high-risk conditions. In patients with HIV-1 infection, independent risk factors for presenting Pseudomonas aeruginosa bacteremia were nosocomial origin (OR, 2.7; 95% CI, 1.3-5.7), neutropenia (OR, 2.7; 95% CI, 1.07-6.8), previous treatment with cephalosporins (OR, 3.6; 95% CI, 1.1-11.6), and a CD4+ cell count lower than 50 cells/mm3 (OR, 3.1; 95% CI, 1.7-8.6). Primary bacteremia and pneumonia were the most common forms of presentation. Fourteen (33%) patients died as a consequence of the bacteremia. The presence of severe sepsis (OR, 17.5; 95% CI, 3.2-68) and the institution of inappropriate definitive antibiotic therapy (OR, 2.7; 95% CI, 1.1-13) were independently associated with a poor outcome. One year after the development of bacteremia, only eight (19%) patients remained alive.
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PMID:Pseudomonas aeruginosa bacteremia in patients infected with human immunodeficiency virus type 1. 1048 23

In clinical practice, the occurrence of arrhythmias in a critical ill patient is often assumed to be due to underlying infection or sepsis. This relationship has been suggested by both case reports and textbooks of Internal Medicine. Two scenarios are deemed possible: The occurrence of "preexisting" arrhythmias in susceptible patients (those with an arrhythmogenic substrate, e.g. a myocardial infarction scar) and the occurrence of arrhythmias mediated in some way through the infection/sepsis in otherwise unsusceptible patients. The present overview portrays the scarcity of data and shows that neither scenario is supported by firm data. While sinus tachycardia is among the spectrum of expected abnormalities during infection or sepsis, bradycardia may be observed in selected cases. This seems to occur relatively frequently in patients with fungemia.
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PMID:[Infection, sepsis and cardiac arrhythmia]. 1059 48

Infusion therapy carries a substantial risk of producing iatrogenic sepsis, bacteremia or fungemia originating from the device used for vascular access or from the contaminated infusate. This study, a semiquantitative assay of the central venous catheter tips (CVC) was carried out and correlated with the blood culture results to determine the probable cause of sepsis in our post operated patients. One thousand six hundred and thirty one surgeries were performed in the Institute of Cardio-Vascular Diseases from January to December 1997. We received 150 CVC tips which were in place for more than five days for culture. Fifty one (51) CVC tips showed growth in either contents or roll. There was associated blood stream infection in 23 patients. The age groups of patients ranged from two months to 67 years and male to female ratio was 109:41. Children below the age of 12 years were 62 in number. Candida spp. (32.4%) and Staphylococcus spp. (33.9%) formed the predominant isolates from the CVC tips.
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PMID:Central venous catheter related infections. 1081 May 78

A registry of United States residents with chronic granulomatous disease (CGD) was established in 1993 in order to estimate the minimum incidence of this uncommon primary immunodeficiency disease and characterize its epidemiologic and clinical features. To date, 368 patients have been registered; 259 have the X-linked recessive form of CGD, 81 have 1 of the autosomal recessive forms, and in 28 the mode of inheritance is unknown. The minimum estimate of birth rate is between 1/200,000 and 1/250,000 live births for the period 1980-1989. Pneumonia was the most prevalent infection (79% of patients; Aspergillus most prevalent cause), followed by suppurative adenitis (53% of patients; Staphylococcus most prevalent cause), subcutaneous abscess (42% of patients; Staphylococcus most prevalent cause), liver abscess (27% of patients; Staphylococcus most prevalent cause), osteomyelitis (25% of patients; Serratia most prevalent cause), and sepsis (18% of patients; Salmonella most prevalent cause). Fifteen percent of patients had gastric outlet obstruction, 10% urinary tract obstruction, and 17% colitis/enteritis. Ten percent of X-linked recessive kindreds and 3% of autosomal recessive kindreds had family members with lupus. Eighteen percent of patients either were deceased when registered or died after being registered. The most common causes of death were pneumonia and/or sepsis due to Aspergillus (23 patients) or Burkholderia cepacia (12 patients). Patients with the X-linked recessive form of the disease appear to have a more serious clinical phenotype than patients with the autosomal recessive forms of the disease, based on the fact that they are diagnosed significantly earlier (mean, 3.01 years of age versus 7.81 years of age, respectively), have a significantly higher prevalence of perirectal abscess (17% versus 7%), suppurative adenitis (59% versus 32%), bacteremia/fungemia (21% versus 10%), gastric obstruction (19% versus 5%), and urinary tract obstruction (11% versus 3%), and a higher mortality (21.2% versus 8.6%).
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PMID:Chronic granulomatous disease. Report on a national registry of 368 patients. 1084 35

Malassezia furfur is a lipophilic yeast known to colonize indwelling catheters. Although progression to vasculitis and sepsis has been described, it has rarely caused fungemia in adults receiving nutrition via an indwelling catheter. Difficulty in diagnosis occurs as M furfur does not grow on routine culture media unless it is supplemented with fatty acids. We present the first case of M furfur fungemia in an adult, complicated by a pedunculated septic thrombus arising from the superior vena cava and extending into the right atrium. Removal of the catheter, amphotericin-B therapy, and surgical debridement were required for cure.
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PMID:Intracardiac mass complicating Malassezia furfur fungemia. 1111 82


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