Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0243026 (
sepsis
)
52,417
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Patients with abdominal
sepsis
were enrolled in a clinical trial of aztreonam vs. tobramycin. All were given clindamycin concomitantly. The pharmacokinetics of aztreonam in 21 patients randomly assigned to receive treatment with aztreonam are reported. The mean age of these patients was 68 years; most had underlying disorders such as
malnutrition
and cardiac or pulmonary disease. Creatinine clearance (Clcr) ranged from 11.2 to 133.1 ml/min. The usual dose of aztreonam was 2.0 g every 8-12 hr. A single pharmacokinetic study was performed over one dosing interval after steady-state conditions were achieved. In approximately one-half of the patients, peritoneal fluid was collected during the interval between doses. Penetration of aztreonam, as expressed as the ratio of concentration in the peritoneal fluid to that in serum, was higher for aztreonam (0.95:1) than for tobramycin (0.46:1). The ratio of the concentration in peritoneal fluid to the minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) of the infecting bacteria was also higher for aztreonam. Serum pharmacokinetic data were analyzed by both two-compartment and moment analysis. For both the steady-state volume of distribution (Vdss) and total body clearance (TBC), the values determined by both methods were highly correlated (r = .96, .99, respectively). Average values for Vdss and TBC were 0.28 liters/kg and 80 ml/min. TBC for aztreonam correlated strongly with CLcr and was described by the regression equation TBC = 1.1 (Clcr) + 1.6, r = .87, P less than .01.
...
PMID:Pharmacokinetics and extravascular penetration of aztreonam in patients with abdominal sepsis. 390 29
Despite antibiotics, infection remains a significant problem in surgical patients. The reasons are multiple, and include acquired immunologic deficiencies that are seen in
malnutrition
,
sepsis
, trauma, and burns. Two immunomodulators, thymopentin (TP-5) and CP-46,665, have been shown to improve survival in infectious animal models of such deficiencies. We investigated the mechanism of action in guinea pigs subjected to a burn of 30% of the total body surface area. These animals received 0.3 mg/kg of thymopentin, 0.3 mg/kg of CP-46,665, or saline solution. Neutrophils, macrophages, and serum samples were obtained from the animals and tested for their ability to phagocytose and kill Pseudomonas aeruginosa. The serum was tested for its ability to opsonize Escherichia coli. Thymopentin was found to improve neutrophil function on postburn days 2 and 4 and to improve macrophage function on postburn day 4. CP-46,665 was found to improve both macrophage function and opsonization on postburn day 2.
...
PMID:Mechanisms of action of two new immunomodulators. 391 63
Acute and chronic
malnutrition
is associated with increased morbidity and mortality in surgical patients. Plasma fibronectin levels have been shown to correlate with reticuloendothelial function and are reduced in burns, shock, trauma, and
sepsis
. Patients failing to show an increase in fibronectin levels after stress have been shown to do poorly. Starvation studies in human volunteers have demonstrated decreasing plasma fibronectin levels until feeding was resumed. The purpose of this study is to examine the usefulness of fibronectin as an assessment parameter in nutritionally depleted hospitalized patients. Eight patients initiated on parenteral nutrition were studied. Plasma fibronectin, albumin, and transferrin levels were drawn before TPN and repeated at various intervals after total parenteral nutrition (TPN) was begun. Mean pre-TPN transferrin was 198.1 +/- 16.1 gm/dl (nl 220-400). Transferrin levels remained statistically unchanged after 8 to 11 days of TPN. Mean pre-TPN albumin was 3.0 +/- 0.2 gm/dl (nl 3.6-4.8) and also remained statistically unchanged after 8 to 11 days of TPN. The mean fibronectin level pre-TPN was 236.4 +/- 24.4 microgram/ml (nl 370-410). Fibronectin rose statistically (P less than 0.005) after 1 to 4 days of TPN to a mean of 341.9 +/- 30.1 microgram/ml and remained elevated and statistically unchanged after 8 to 11 days of TPN. Six of the eight patients studied survived and had demonstrated at least a 30 per cent increase in fibronectin after 1 to 4 days of TPN. Both patients who died demonstrated minimal increase in fibronectin levels after 1 to 4 days of TPN.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Fibronectin. A new nutritional parameter. 392 69
There are many tumors that have paraneoplastic syndromes. Furthermore, location of certain tumors can result in very specific effects on the host, especially tumors in the hypothalamus, the intestinal tract, or the liver. Finally, tumors of the immune system can have significant distant consequences. However, from direct experimental evidence, from model systems, and from the utilization of nutritional manipulation in the treatment of cancer, the data suggest very strongly that there is no unique cancer
malnutrition
. Early diagnosed cancer does not show
malnutrition
as a presenting symptom. Furthermore, all metabolic disturbances can be explained on the basis of the metabolic differences of tumor cells and normal cells and are very frequently proportional to the bulk of the tumor. The cachexia that is associated with malignancies is more likely cachexia in cancer patients than it is a specific cancer cachexia, unless the tumor burden is very large. This point was clearly made in a short review of the causes of cachexia in nearly 1500 cancer patients in Russia (145). Brennan also feels that most cases of
malnutrition
are uncomplicated starvation, and cancer cachexia has many features seen in major injury or
sepsis
(16). This distinction has great implications in the management of cancer patients.
...
PMID:Nutrition and cancer: physiological interrelationships. 392 50
When scleroderma involves the small intestines,
malnutrition
with resulting immune incompetence and
sepsis
can occur. Two cases are presented in which patients with scleroderma involving the gastrointestinal tract were treated with cyclic home hyperalimentation, restoring their nutritional status and improving their quality of life.
...
PMID:The use of cyclic home hyperalimentation for malabsorption in patients with scleroderma involving the small intestines. 393 Jul 71
This study set out to investigate the alteration of amino acid (AA) and protein metabolism in patients with
malnutrition
,
sepsis
, acute pancreatitis and liver diseases. The results showed that in preoperative patients with
malnutrition
or protein catabolism (decreased levels of plasma proteins, increased urea production rate) the postoperative complications were significantly increased. An increased postoperative infusion of branched chain AA did not improve postoperative nitrogen retention nor plasma protein syntheses in patients with colon or rectum CA. Patients with
sepsis
or acute pancreatitis had drastically reduced levels of total muscular free AA, mainly due to a fall in muscle glutamine. In septic patients also the hepatic levels of free AA were decreased. These changes of AA metabolism found in clinical situation were not always reflected by results found in experimental rat models (
sepsis
, pancreatitis, burn injury). The parenteral administration of a synthetic dipeptide containing glutamine and alanine decreased the muscular decrease of glutamine and alanine and increased the hepatic uptake of these two AA in a catabolic dog model. In critically ill patients changes in amino acid and protein metabolism lead to a protein catabolic situation. Urea production rate and muscle glutamine levels seem to be closely related to the prognosis of catabolic patients.
...
PMID:[Amino acid and protein metabolism in critically ill patients]. 393 9
The conventional animal model of human portal systemic encephalopathy is the dog with Eck fistula. Dogs fed standard dog chow after Eck fistula manifest anorexia, weight loss, hepatic atrophy and encephalopathy. This study was done to determine the natural history of dogs undergoing Eck fistulas when adequate nutrition is maintained with a palatable diet. Twenty-four mongrel dogs were divided into four groups--Eck fistula fed standard dry dog chow (EF-SC) (n equals nine); sham operated fed standard chow (SO-SC) (n equals five); Eck fistula fed a liquid (Isocal) diet (EF-LD), LD), and sham operated fed a liquid diet (SO-LD) (n equals five). Dogs were sacrificed when they had clinical signs of encephalopathy or up to 120 days after operation. EF-SC dogs had a daily caloric intake approximately 40 per cent of that of the other groups. Two EF-SC dogs died of
sepsis
within two weeks of the operation, the other seven became encephalopathic between 46 and 91 days (a mean of 63.6 +/- 15.6). No other dogs had signs of neurologic deterioration. EF-SC dogs lost 19 +/- 9 per cent body weight and the serum albumin level decreased 14.5 per cent while the other groups maintained body weight and serum albumin levels. Both EF-SC and EF-LD groups had decreased liver weight to body weight ratios (LW X 100/BW) compared with sham operated upon dogs reflecting hepatic atrophy (1.97 +/- 0.7 and 2.2 +/- 0.23 versus 3.04 +/- 0.85 and 3.48 +/- 0.44). Results of histologic examination of the liver revealed hepatocyte atrophy, deglycogenation and lipid accumulation in EF dogs. We conclude from these data that providing dogs with Eck fistula a palatable diet prevents weight loss and
malnutrition
, but not hepatic atrophy. The lack of neurologic signs in well nourished dogs suggests to us that data concerning hepatic coma from the standard Eck fistula model should be interpreted with extreme caution.
...
PMID:Adequate diet prevents hepatic coma in dogs with Eck fistulas. 394 90
Tissue infection and systemic
sepsis
are common causes of morbidity and late mortality after major thoracic trauma. To seek causative mechanisms, prognostic indicators, and areas of possible improvement in therapy, we reviewed 310 consecutive adults admitted with major thoracic trauma. Of these, 56 (18%) died of massive injuries in the first 5 days; the remaining 254 were considered at risk for infectious complications. There were 21 late deaths in this group, and 15 (71%) were caused by systemic
sepsis
. Eighty-four patients (33%) developed thoracic infections, and 15 (6%) had significant nonthoracic infections. Markers of increased risk of infection included blunt injury, shock and unconsciousness on arrival, and splenectomy. Pulmonary infection was increased significantly following prolonged endotracheal intubation, but was virtually absent following tracheostomy. The risk of infection was increased significantly if prophylactic antibiotics were not used, but no definite correlation could be made to advanced age, pre-existent disease, nor post-traumatic
malnutrition
. Attention to some of these factors may decrease the risk of infection in thoracic trauma.
...
PMID:Patterns of infection and mortality in thoracic trauma. 400 87
Studies in germfree (GF) rats and mice demonstrated that GF animals were as sensitive if not more so to thermal injury than conventional (CV) animals. Death occurred in both groups after a similar period of time. There was no evidence of infection in either group. Using GF animals in other forms of injury such as hemorrhagic shock, others report that death occurred with equal frequency in both GF and CV animals. It is therefore postulated that
sepsis
cannot be the basic cause of death in severely traumatized patients. It is of utmost importance to control the toxic effect of tissue breakdown products before the vicious cycle of depressed immunological function and
malnutrition
ensues. A method of neutralizing the toxic effects of thermal injury by competition is described. Competitin is an "antitoxin" produced in vitro from "toxin(s)" isolated from burned human skin. Competitins to other toxin(s) have been produced and it is postulated that competitins may also be produced from the breakdown products of all forms of injury.
...
PMID:Thermal injury mortality in germfree and conventional animals. 402 69
We have reviewed 107 cases of staphylococcal bacteraemia in order to assess the current clinical spectrum of serious staphylococcal
sepsis
in Zimbabwe, where staphylococcal bacteraemia is common. Infection was hospital-acquired in 35 cases and community-acquired in 72 cases. The mortality rate was 28%. Most patients were young, with predisposing conditions such as prematurity, protein-caloric
malnutrition
and measles. The length of the prodromal illness tended to be short and a primary site of infection, usually the lungs or skin, was obvious in 66% of patients. In 30% there was evidence of metastatic spread, usually to meninges, bone, joint and muscle, but endocarditis was uncommon. Metastatic infection was rare when infection was acquired in hospital. Death appeared to be associated with measles, protein-caloric
malnutrition
, acquisition of infection in hospital, absence of an obvious focus of infection and with inappropriate antibiotic therapy. Aggressive treatment with antibiotics intravenously was the rule. A combination of penicillin and an aminoglycoside was favoured until the nature of the infecting organism was established. Of those patients who died, 38% had received less than 72 h antibiotic therapy. Multiple antibiotic resistance is now widespread in Zimbabwe.
...
PMID:Staphylococcal bacteraemia in Zimbabwe 1983. 403 14
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10