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Query: UMLS:C0243026 (
sepsis
)
52,417
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
This prospective study of elective cholecystectomy investigated the frequency and type of bacteria in gallbladder bile at operation, the factors predicting the presence of bacteria in bile, and the relationship between bacteria in bile and subsequent wound
sepsis
. In 148 consecutive cases 23% of bile cultures were positive. The overall wound infection rate was 15%, but 91% of all wound infections occurred in patients with positive bile cultures. Eighty-five per cent of all positive bile cultures and 86% of all wound infections occurred in 37% of the patients, characterized by age over 60 years and/or a history of previous attacks of
acute cholecystitis
. We suggest that in elective cholecystectomy prophylactic antibiotics should be restricted to this group of patients to limit the use of antibiotics.
...
PMID:Wound sepsis after elective cholecystectomy. Restriction of prophylactic antibiotics to risk groups. 703 65
An unconventional presentation of an elderly man with
sepsis
and a nonfunctioning permanent cardiac pacemaker is reviewed. Our interpretations of signs of an acute abdomen and laboratory evidence suggestive of
acute cholecystitis
did not lead to the correct diagnosis. The pacemaker electrode had perforated the myocardium and this event is believed to be secondary to bacterial endocarditis at the electrode tip. The therapeutic implications of this unique case are discussed.
...
PMID:Sepsis and pacemaker malfunction. 712 76
Percutaneous cholecystostomy offers a potentially important therapeutic modality for critically ill patients with
acute cholecystitis
who represent a high risk for general anaesthesia. The aim of the study was to assess experience with percutaneous cholecystostomy in resolving the acute episode of cholecystitis without operative intervention. Twenty-two consecutive patients with a clinical diagnosis of
acute cholecystitis
underwent the procedure. All were at high risk for general anaesthesia, and all but one developed cholecystitis while hospitalized for another co-morbid condition; 14 were in an intensive care unit. Twenty-one of the 22 patients proved to have
acute cholecystitis
(11 acalculous, ten cholelithiasis). There were no acute technical complications. Toxaemia resolved in 17 of the 21 patients with
acute cholecystitis
.
Acute cholecystitis
failed to resolve in three patients; all died within 48 h from overwhelming generalized
sepsis
. One patient required emergency cholecystectomy for bile peritonitis when the cholecystostomy catheter became dislodged 24 h after placement. The 60-day mortality rate for the acalculous and calculous patient groups was 55 and 20 per cent, respectively. Only three interval cholecystectomies have been performed at a mean follow-up of 19 months. In conclusion, percutaneous cholecystostomy may be the procedure of choice for the management of
acute cholecystitis
in the very high-risk critically ill patient. If symptoms fail to resolve quickly, ongoing
sepsis
, cholangitis or gallbladder necrosis should be suspected.
...
PMID:Percutaneous cholecystostomy: a valuable technique in high-risk patients with presumed acute cholecystitis. 866 26
Because of the high diagnostic yield, its widespread availability and the possibility of bedside examinations, US has become the imaging modality of choice in patients with acute right upper quadrant pain caused by inflammatory disorders such as liver abscesses, acute cholangitis and
acute cholecystitis
. Computed tomography (CT) can be reserved for more complex cases. US, often in combination with fluoroscopy, is also widely used to control interventions. In patients with liver abscesses the therapeutic strategy is determined by the size of the abscess, its uni- or multifocal presentation and the causative micro-organisms cultured after diagnostic percutaneous aspiration. Small-sized pyogenic abscesses (< 3 cm), most fungal and amoebic abscesses can be treated medically. Large-sized pyogenic abscesses should be drained percutaneously and can be cured in 75-90%. Surgery should be restricted to patients with prolonged
sepsis
after percutaneous drainage and patients with infected pre-existing hepatic lesions. In patients with acute cholangitis drainage of the infected bile is essential. Invasive imaging such as percutaneous or endoscopic cholangiography procedures such as nasobiliary drainage, stent placement and sphincterotomy has decreased mortality rates dramatically. Percutaneous drainage should be considered in patients in whom endoscopic procedures fail. Surgery may have a place in the treatment of bile duct obstruction which causes cholangitis. In patients with suspected
acute cholecystitis
, imaging modalities such as cholescintigraphy and CT can be reserved for patients with inconclusive sonographic studies and more complex cases. The contribution of percutaneous gallbladder aspiration and culture to diagnose
acute cholecystitis
seems limited. Percutaneous cholecystostomy is an effective procedure with a low morbidity and mortality for high-risk patients. The drainage catheter in the gallbladder does not interfere with cholecystectomy at a later stage in patients with calculous cholecystitis. In most patients with acalculous cholecystitis, percutaneous cholecystectomy provides a definitive treatment.
...
PMID:Imaging and intervention in patients with acute right upper quadrant disease. 777 13
The diagnosis of abdominal infections and inflammations often presents considerable difficulty, and various imaging techniques may be required to localize them accurately. At present, radiolabelled leucocytes offer the most widely accepted radionuclide method for imaging inflammation. Because of the many advantages of technetium-99m (99mTc) over indium-111 (111In), 99mTc-HMPAO-leucocyte scintigraphy is preferred for the investigation of acute abdominal
sepsis
and inflammatory bowel disease, and 111In-leucocyte scintigraphy for more chronic infections and renal
sepsis
. The 99mTc-HMPAO-labelled leucocytes technique is highly accurate within the first few hours postinjection, and is therefore useful also in acutely ill patients. It is sensitive in detecting abdominal abscesses in all locations except the liver and spleen. By whole body imaging, unsuspected sites and types of infection can be found. 99mTc-HMPAO-leucocyte scan is valuable also in the investigation of
acute cholecystitis
in problematic situations in which ultrasound is known to give misleading results, especially in acute acalculous cholecystitis. In inflammatory bowel disease it can reliably assess disease activity, but a normal scintigraphy does not exclude mild inflammation. Leucocyte scan is useful also in suspected acute appendicitis, acute diverticulitis, pelvic inflammatory disease, aortic graft infection, etc. But infection and inflammation cannot reliably be differentiated, which may cause misinterpretations in the early postoperative period. Radionuclide techniques have an important role to play in the investigation of abdominal
sepsis
if the nuclear medicine department can offer instant investigations when the clinical problem is acute.
...
PMID:Investigation of suspected intra-abdominal sepsis: the contribution of nuclear medicine. 797 41
The treatment of biliary lithiasis has changed during the past 20 years. Cholecystectomy remains the gold standard for cholelithiasis, but many options are available for calculi of the common bile duct. Among them are surgical open or laparoscopic choledochotomy, biliary-enteric anastomosis, transduodenal sphincterotomy (TDS), endoscopic sphincterotomy. With the aim to describe the current place of TDS, we reviewed the patients operated on in our department between 1976 and 1992. We found 78 patients with a mean age of 58 years (26-89 years). 34 (43%) of them had
acute cholecystitis
, with 26 being operated on urgently. 47 (60%) were jaundiced, 15 (19%) had pancreatitis and 12 (15%) had cholangitis before operation. Indications for TDS have been impacted stone or absence of progression of the contrast medium on intraoperative cholangiography in 71 patients (91%). 3 patients died (1 pulmonary embolism, 1
sepsis
of pulmonary origin, 1 MOF syndrome complicating preoperative necrotizing pancreatitis). 30 patients (38%) had complications, of which 20 were directly related to TDS. Hemorrhage occurred in 4 cases, and resolved spontaneously without transfusion. Hyperamylasemia occurred in 17 instances, but clinical pancreatitis developed in only 1 case, with complete resolution. 1 duodenal fistula healed after conservative therapy. No death is attributable directly to TDS. Today, the importance of endoscopic sphincterotomy is increasing. This retrospective study shows that TDS, if performed with caution, does not increase the operative risks even in emergent operations. During surgical exploration of the common bile duct, TDS is indicated to remove an impacted stone, or as a bilio-enteric anastomosis if multiple stones are present with a thin common duct.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Current status of surgical transduodenal papillotomy]. 803 53
Emphysematous cholecystitis is a rare variant of
acute cholecystitis
, most frequently seen in elderly, debilitated, or diabetic patients. This report documents the development of fulminant
sepsis
due to acalculous cholecystitis after endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatogram (ERCP) in an otherwise healthy patient with suspected malignant obstructive jaundice. Three other cases of
acute cholecystitis
have been reported in the literature after ERCP. Although not proven to prevent infectious complications during ERCP, strong consideration should be given to prophylactic antibiotics in patients with suspected malignant obstruction and/or coexistent medical illness, eg, diabetes. When attempts at decompression of the obstructed biliary system by endoscopy fail, decompression by percutaneous or surgical routes should be considered in a timely fashion.
...
PMID:Emphysematous cholecystitis after ERCP. 805 Mar 24
Acalculous cholecystitis, a recognized manifestation of acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS), causes abdominal pain which can be relieved by cholecystectomy. The indications for cholecystectomy have remained undefined, however, because the cholecystitis is usually accompanied by generalized cholangitis and it is difficult to distinguish the relative clinical importance of the two problems. Since 1985, we have performed cholecystectomy on 8 patients with AIDS who had clinical manifestations of
acute cholecystitis
associated with a thickening of the gallbladder wall by 5 mm to 12 mm. Two of the 8 had gallstones and 4 had associated cholangitis. All had been treated with antibiotics for 20 to 180 days before surgery, but physical deterioration had progressed in every case. At the moment of surgical intervention, 4 patients had multiple organ failure. One patient died 3 days postoperatively, but the rest recovered rapidly with resolution of the abdominal pain and
sepsis
. Two patients died 20 days after surgery due to complications of AIDS. The remaining 5 died due to AIDS at 6, 9, 10, 12, and 14 months after surgery. Two of this group developed progressive cholangitis with raised serum alkaline phosphatase. Our experience indicates that cholecystectomy should be considered for the treatment of severe and persistent symptoms of hepatobiliary manifestations of AIDS notwithstanding the presence of cholangitis.
...
PMID:Cholecystectomy for cholecystitis in patients with acquired immune deficiency syndrome. 808 61
The records of 26 patients who underwent cholecystostomy procedures for presumed
acute cholecystitis
during a 6-year period were reviewed. Nine patients had operative tube cholecystostomy (OC), and 17 patients had radiologic percutaneous cholecystostomy (PC). A correct diagnosis of
acute cholecystitis
was made in 22 of 26 patients (84%), including 14 of 17 PC patients and 8 of 9 in the OC group. The rate of resolution of cholecystitis was the same in each group (75% OC versus 78% PC). APACHE II scores prior to treatment were significantly higher in OC patients (20.9 OC versus 12.4 PC, p < 0.01). There were 5 deaths, including 3 in the OC groups and 2 in the PC group. Nonfatal complications were more frequent in the PC group. Two of the 14 correctly diagnosed PC patients (14%) subsequently required emergency cholecystectomy for persistent biliary
sepsis
, and 6 patients (43%) required at least 1 tube exchange for occlusion or dislodgement. Overall, only 5 of the 14 patients (36%) in the PC group were successfully treated without complications compared with 5 of 8 patients (63%) in the OC group. Despite its theoretical advantages, PC was no more effective than OC in the treatment of
acute cholecystitis
. These data suggest that OC remains a viable treatment option in critically ill patients with
acute cholecystitis
.
...
PMID:Operative tube versus percutaneous cholecystostomy for acute cholecystitis. 832 26
Morphine-augmented radionuclide cholescintigraphy (MC) is a useful adjunctive diagnostic tool for the identification of
acute cholecystitis
(AC) in patients who are hospitalized and critically ill with occult
sepsis
. The results of previous studies have demonstrated a reduction in false-positive rates, that is, nonvisualization, from 40 percent with standard radionuclide cholescintigraphy to 5 percent with MC in these high-risk patient groups, with an overall accuracy of 92 percent. This study was performed to determine the significance of a positive test result from MC in patients with occult
sepsis
. We reviewed the records of all 20 patients at high risk in whom MC was positive during the 35-month period ending 31 May 1992. AC was confirmed by laparotomy in all 16 patients who underwent surgical treatment. There were two patients who recovered with antibiotic therapy alone (considered false-positives) and two additional patients who died without operation or a confirmed diagnosis of AC (excluded from analysis). Thus, in this series, MC was associated with a positive predictive value of 0.89, confirming that it is a valuable adjunct in establishing the diagnosis of AC in patients who are seriously ill and hospitalized with occult
sepsis
.
...
PMID:The significance of a positive test of morphine cholescintigraphy in hospitalized patients. 835 94
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