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

A case of acute sepsis caused by Gaffkya tetragena in an adult with acquired hypogammaglobulinemia has been described. The Authors pointout the importance that particular conditions of disreactivity and/or of immunodeficiency can play in the acquistion of pathogenicity by Gaffkya tetragena. In the case under discussion a high deficit of IgG and IgA was demonstrable, which had previously caused a long series of infective bacterial diseases.
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PMID:[Acute sepsis caused by "Gaffkya tetragena" in adult with hypogammaglobulinemia (author's transl)]. 1 99

Four patients with acute paracoccidioidomycosis, hypoalbuminemia, ascites and associated infections are reported. They have been admitted to hospital 35 times, 4 of them due to active paracoccidioidomycosis, 14 to associated infections, 14 to ascites, edema and diarrhoea and 3 to herniorrhaphy. Two of them recovered after sepsis and central nervous system, muscular and subcutaneous cryptococcosis. The remaining two died. One had infectious diarrhoea (S. flexneri), peritoneal tuberculosis and sepsis (S. epidermidis); the other had bacterial meningitis, erysipelas, beta-hemolytic Streptococcus sepsis and miliary tuberculosis. Their immunodeficiency was attributed to enteric protein loss and/or malabsorption and malnutrition and was recognized by reduced response to delayed hypersensitivity skin tests in four patients and hypogammaglobulinemia in three of them. The authors discuss the need for prospective studies to be carried out, aiming at the mechanisms involved in secondary infections. Alternatives for maintaining the patients' adequate nutritional state should be investigated, to guarantee proper immune response and thus the ability to control intervening infections in patients with juvenile paracoccidioidomycosis.
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PMID:Immunodeficiency secondary to juvenile paracoccidioidomycosis: associated infections. 148 Feb 6

Patients with extensive lower extremity ulcerations initially thought to be vascular disease were subsequently proved to have pyoderma gangrenosum and malignant lymphoma. Both patients died of sepsis; one patient exhibited hypogammaglobulinemia involving immunoglobulins IgA, IgG, and IgE; in the second patient, a polyclonal excess involving IgA and IgE was present.
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PMID:Pyoderma gangrenosum with cutaneous T-cell lymphoma manifested as lower extremity ulcers--case reports. 204 99

As a result of inadequate placental transport of maternal IgG, preterm neonates of less than 32 weeks' gestation, especially those with birth weights less than 1,500 g, are profoundly hypogammaglobulinemic at birth, a condition that worsens during the first several weeks of life. This hypogammaglobulinemia is believed to contribute to their high frequency of late-onset sepsis, with its accompanying morbidity and mortality. Animal studies suggest that human immunoglobulin prepared for intravenous use (IVIG) improves host defense against pathogens that cause neonatal infections, but studies of IVIG in human neonates have been inconclusive because of the small numbers of infants included, lack of suitable controls, use of clinical rather than strict microbiologic definition of sepsis, and performance only in a single hospital outside the United States. A double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled multicenter trial in the United States is in progress to determine the efficacy of IVIG in the prevention of late-onset infections in infants with birth weights between 500 and 1,750 g. Infants are infused with 500 mg of IVIG/kg or albumin-saline placebo at 3-7 days of age, 7 days later, and every 14 days for five doses. Efficacy parameters include mortality, number of proved infectious episodes (bacterial, fungal, or viral), and infection-related morbidity. Definitive guidelines for the possible use of prophylactic IVIG in low-birth-weight neonates should result from this evaluation of 500 to 700 infants in the United States.
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PMID:Role of intravenous immunoglobulin in prevention of late-onset infection in low-birth-weight neonates. The Neonatal IVIG Study Group. 211 36

Two hundred and sixty-two patients (actual number 162) of hematological malignancies were admitted to our department from November 1977 to December 1986. Fourty-three of them (16.4%) were demonstrated to be accompanied with sepsis by blood culture. In acute non-lymphocytic leukemias (AML, APL, AMoL) the rate of sepsis was 33.8% (27 patients), while in lymphocytic malignancies (ML, HD, ATL) it was 11.7% (16 patients), particularly being 3.0% in ATL. Among the detected pathogenic microorganisms, gram-negative bacilli were 86.2% in the former and 50.0% in the latter. Especially, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Klebsiella pneumoniae and Escherichia coli occupied 58.6% of the total in the former. Laboratory examination, when sepsis occurred, revealed peripheral neutropenia in acute non-lymphocytic leukemias (mean 831/cmm) but not in lymphocytic malignancy (mean 4,420/cmm). And 20 of the 27 cases showed remarkable neutropenia of below 500/cmm in the former. On the other hand in the latter, out of 16 only one with ATL was the case. Hypogammaglobulinemia was one of the characteristic features in lymphocytic malignancies but not in acute non-lymphocytic leukemias. Hypogammaglobulinemia in lymphocytic malignancies might be affected by long-term immunodepressant therapy. Immunologic skin reaction was demonstrated to be decreased in lymphocytic malignancies on admission. From the findings mentioned above, affecting factors to infections may be mainly neutropenia in acute non-lymphocytic leukemias and immunodeficiency in lymphocytic malignancies. And sepsis can occur frequently under neutropenic condition. In ATL both of humoral- and cellular-immunologic disturbance were detected before therapy. But peripheral neutrophil count was maintained to be normal and this could be the reason for the low septic incidence in ATL despite of total immunodepression.
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PMID:[Infections in hematological malignancies--clinical analysis of septic patients admitted to the Second Department of Miyazaki Medical College Hospital in the past ten years]. 240 13

A 1-year-old boy who had had recurrent episodes of sepsis was found to have transient hypogammaglobulinemia of infancy and was treated with gammaglobulin supplements. He subsequently remained IgA deficient and a regulatory T cell imbalance was found.
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PMID:Transient hypogammaglobulinemia of infancy with severe bacterial infections and persistent IgA deficiency. 242 77

The availability of safe and effective preparations of human immune globulin that can be administered intravenously has revolutionized replacement therapy for patients suffering from hypogammaglobulinaemia. Of equal importance and greater interest, however, has been the recognition that super physiological doses of IgG can manipulate an abnormal immune system. Future prospects for the use of immunoglobulin preparations to supply specific antibodies includes the standardization of procedures, whereby patients with acute sepsis may receive antibiotics and immunoglobulin simultaneously. Already there is in vitro evidence that suggests that opsonized bacteria are more readily affected by aminoglycosides. It seems certain that gamma globulin will be used routinely in the management of patients with a number of immunomalignancies, such as chronic lymphatic leukaemia and multiple myeloma that feature hypogammaglobulinaemia, especially when chemotherapy is being administered. Control trials are underway to determine whether gamma globulin given intravenously to premature babies will satisfactorily correct their immuno-deficient state and improve their chances of survival. The immunomanipulative capacity of immunoglobulin is yet to be fully realized. Success in ideopathic thrombocytopenic purpura had led to a trial of gamma globulin in a number of autoimmune conditions. Success has been reported in myasthenia gravis, rheumatoid arthritis, diabetes, patients with circulating antibodies to factor VIII and Kawasaki's disease. The mechanism of action is unknown but almost certainly multifactorial. Two proven mechanisms that will be added to in the future, include blockade of the Fc receptors on cells of the reticulo-endothelial system and manipulation of immunoregulatory T cells by the presence of anti-idiotypic antibodies in the preparation.
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PMID:The clinical use of intravenous gammaglobulin. 244 Jul 43

The introduction of preparations of immune serum globulin that are safe for intravenous use (IVIG) has made possible safe and effective prophylactic treatment for patients with a variety of humoral immunodeficiencies. These include not only primary agammaglobulinemia and common variable hypogammaglobulinemia but also the antibody deficiencies that accompany chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) and multiple myeloma, as well as the hypogamma-globulinemia found in very low birth weight newborns who have not received adequate transplacental IgG from their mothers. In contrast, trials to date have not shown efficacy of IVIG in preventing sepsis in burn patients. The ease of administration and efficacy of IVIG in preventing respiratory symptoms in hypogammaglobulinemic patients has suggested that many other patients presenting with sinusitis and asthma, recurrent bronchitis, and other chronic chest symptoms might also benefit from IVIG and that they should be worked up for IgG subclass or specific antibody deficiencies. Side effects of IVIG administration are generally minor and may be prevented by slow administration and/or pretreatment with aspirin or Benadryl. The only contraindication to IVIG treatment is anaphylactic sensitivity to IgA, which is extremely rare. IVIG is thus an effective and safe form of prophylaxis that can reduce the incidence of pneumonia and other respiratory infections in patients with antibody deficiency as a predisposing factor.
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PMID:Role of gamma globulin. 251 39

Group A streptococcal sepsis was documented in a child who presented with an acute abdomen. Massive retroperitoneal edema was observed at laparotomy with no focus of infection. Immunologic evaluation revealed low serum immunoglobulins and deficient in vitro IgG synthesis consistent with transient hypogammaglobulinemia of infancy. Unusual or severe infections in infancy should be evaluated for congenital immunologic disease.
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PMID:Streptococcal sepsis presenting as acute abdomen in a child with transient hypogammaglobulinemia of infancy. 354 Feb 63

Intravenous gammaglobulin is effective therapy of ITP and other autoantibody-mediated immune cytopenias. All children as well as adults unresponsive to splenectomy or with known immune deficiency are probably the best candidates for treatment with IVGG. Its major advantage, in addition to its efficacy of treatment and possible remission-inducing effect, is that it has the fewest side effects of any treatment of ITP so that it is the best maintenance therapy of patients when effective. Future uses of IVGG remain to be determined. Premature infants with a high mortality from sepsis and with hypogammaglobulinemia due to termination of pregnancy prior to transplacental antibody transfer may benefit from IVGG. A preliminary study suggested such benefit and also showed safety of IVGG treatment in that there was no impaired immune responsiveness of these prematures at 2 years of age (28). Another potential usage of IVGG involves the treatment of the hypogammaglobulinemia associated with certain types of malignancy. Patients with CLL, especially in the advanced stages, are often hypogammaglobulinemic. Multiple myeloma and Waldenstrom's macroglobulinemia are two other B-cell malignancies associated with antibody production defects which might benefit from antibody replacement therapy. Therapeutic IgG levels may be harder to obtain due to hypercatabolism of immunoglobulin. The issue of immune hyporesponsiveness during intensive chemotherapy is also unexplored. Secondary antibody responses do not seem to be impaired, but primary responses, as tested in numerous immunization studies, are decidedly impaired. Certain protocols, especially those treating high-risk acute leukemias and neuroblastoma during induction therapy are intensive with high rates of sepsis, and may warrant trials of prophylactic IVGG. Similarly, some form of humoral prophylaxis is becoming an important part of the handling of the patient undergoing bone marrow transplantation not only to prevent bacterial sepsis but also to prevent cytomegalovirus (CMV) interstitial pneumonitis. A likely additional usage is gammaglobulin replacement for patients undergoing plasmapheresis, especially if performed multiple times. Finally, the broad spectrum of antibacterial and antiviral antibodies present in the preparations (such as anti-CMV, anti-Group B strep, and antiendotoxin) and the ease and safety of delivery allow the preparations to be used in situations where a hyperimmune preparation might be desired and/or where more than one pathogen is possible. In summary, IVGG is a treatment capable of safely conferring significant benefits to selected patients.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Intravenous usage of gammaglobulin: humoral immunodeficiency, immune thrombocytopenic purpura, and newer indications. 404 Jul 95


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