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Query: UMLS:C0243026 (
sepsis
)
52,417
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Iron deficiency is prevalent in childhood in the developed and developing countries. Programs of presumptive therapy, mass supplementation and food fortification have been introduced in many countries. The unresolved debate over the interaction of iron and infection in the clinical setting prompts re-evaluation of these practices. Situations of
iron overload
are associated with increased susceptibility to certain infections, although the exact mechanisms may vary with the main pathology. Iron treatment has been associated with acute exacerbations of infection, in particular malaria. In most instances parenteral iron was used. In the neonate parenteral iron is associated with serious E. coli
sepsis
. In one country, with endemic malaria, parenteral iron was associated with increased rates of malaria and increased morbidity due to respiratory disease in infants. In contrast in non-malarious countries studies of oral iron supplementation have if anything shown a reduction in infectious morbidity. Methodological problems in the latter reports indicate the need for further controlled prospective studies with accurate morbidity recording if informed recommendations are to be made.
...
PMID:Iron and infection: the clinical evidence. 187 85
Hemochromatosis, or primary
iron overload
, is a variably expressed genetic metabolic disorder greatly modified by sex, age, diet, and alcohol consumption. Although a diagnosis has been made at the bedside by careful documentation of the slow resolution of subcutaneous iron pigment, clinical diagnosis is frequently overlooked, and even autopsy may fail to reveal hemochromatosis as the cause for cirrhosis. Genetic linkage studies have confirmed the extremely high prevalence of this disorder. Untreated patients may succumb to
sepsis
caused by organisms such as Vibrio vulnificus, Yersinia species, and others whose virulence is altered by iron availability.
...
PMID:Hemochromatosis and infection: alcohol and iron, oysters and sepsis. 248 33
The principle of iron conservation is the basis of iron metabolism; the normal basal loss of iron from the body is about 1 mg daily in a 70 kg man and 0.8 mg in a 55 kg woman. Iron is lost mainly by the menstrual and gastrointestinal routes. The total iron requirement during pregnancy is 800 mg; in the last month the requirement may amount to 7 to 8 mg/day. Supplementary iron is recommended for many menstruating women, and during the latter part of pregnancy. Correct fetal iron metabolism is ensured by proper maternal iron status, although there are contradictory opinions and findings about the relationship between maternal and fetal iron metabolism. Preterm infants fed on breast milk have a negative iron balance, and require an iron intake of about 0.6 mg/kg/day, and 3.4 mg/1 g haemoglobin, to compensate for intestinal and venesection iron losses, respectively. The absorption of supplementary iron by the preterm infant is a linear function of intake. Preterm infants do not require iron supplements when given repeated blood transfusions. During lactation the total iron losses of the mother are 1 mg/day, and thus no supplementary iron is needed if the iron metabolism has been in balance during the pregnancy. Serum ferritin concentration decreases continuously when iron stores in the body are reduced, and totally empty iron stores are the only known reasons for low serum ferritin concentration. Despite depleted iron stores, serum ferritin concentration can be normal or higher than normal in protein-energy malnutrition, up to 3 months after major surgery, in acute liver damage, in some patients with prolonged hyperglycaemia due to diabetes mellitus, in acute lobar pneumonia, active pulmonary tuberculosis and rheumatoid arthritis on gold therapy, in
sepsis
secondary to marrow hypoplasia induced by chemotherapy, in heavy drinkers and for a few days after myocardial infarction. In haemochromatosis, iron is deposited in liver (producing fibrosis), pancreas, endocrine glands and heart. The rise in the level of iron in the body is due to increased absorption and/or increased intake. This pathology may occur in transfusions, in alcoholism (especially when alcoholic beverages are contaminated with iron and the diet is low-protein), in several liver diseases, in congenital transferrin deficiency and in idiopathic disease. Patients susceptible to haemochromatosis should receive a low-iron diet. Serum ferritin determination may be helpful in early identification of susceptible members of a family with idiopathic familial haemochromatosis, but transferrin saturation is not a good indicator of either iron depletion or
iron overload
.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Clinical pharmacokinetics of iron preparations. 267 7
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 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
We analyzed the clinical data and liver histology for
iron overload
in 74 renal allograft recipients. Twenty of the 74 patients had histological evidence of hemosiderosis. Four patients had hemochromatosis. Of the 2 noninvasive diagnostic tests the serum ferritin level was more reliable than percent saturation of transferrin in predicting the histological diagnosis of hemosiderosis. Of the 20 patients with hemosiderosis 14 died either from liver failure or concomitant
sepsis
. Female patients and those who received long-term dialysis had higher susceptibility for developing hemosiderosis. Of the 6 patients treated with phlebotomies, the response was good in 4 and incomplete in 2. Hemosiderosis and hemochromatosis should be considered in the differential diagnosis of posttransplant liver disease. Intermittent phlebotomies if carried out early may prevent the progression of hemosiderosis to micronodular cirrhosis.
...
PMID:Hemosiderosis and hemochromatosis in renal transplant recipients. Clinical and pathological features, diagnostic correlations, predisposing factors, and treatment. 390 17
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
Infections due to Yersinia enterocolitica are usually limited to the bowel. When infection is generalized, the role of
iron overload
and iron chelation has been discussed. We report the case of a 55 year-old patient with sideroblastic anemia who received repetitive transfusions and deferoxamine for 4 years and heme arginate for 2 months, and who was admitted in our institution for Yersinia enterocolitica
sepsis
. Treatment by third-generation cephalosporins and aminoglycosides has allowed favorable outcome.
...
PMID:[Yersinia enterocolitica septicemia, iron overload and deferoxamine]. 748 Nov 60
Vibrio vulnificus has been associated with three main clinical syndromes; primary septicemia; wound infection, and gastroenteritis. This organism has increased virulence for persons with underlying medical conditions that predispose to
iron overload
or an impaired immune system. Since the organism proliferates more readily in warm, coastal waters, such infections are more commonly found in those regions. Infection can result from the ingestion of contaminated, undercooked seafood; contact of a wound with seawater; or a puncture wound sustained from a contaminated surface. Vibrio infections rarely occur in inland areas, but when they do occur, they are usually a result of the contact of wounds with contaminated, brackish water or the ingestion of raw shellfish. Because infections with this organism occur less frequently in non-coastal regions, the diagnosis may not be suspected initially in susceptible individuals and a delay of treatment may result. We present a case of V. vulnificus
sepsis
occurring in a man with underlying liver disease and a history of row oyster consumption in Oklahoma and discuss the clinical manifestations of primary
sepsis
with this organism as well as prevention strategies.
...
PMID:Overwhelming sepsis with Vibrio vulnificus: a coastal pathogen in Oklahoma. 893 53
Patients with hepatic
iron overload
who undergo orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT) have a worse 1-year survival than those who undergo transplantation for other indications; the long-term outcome in this population is unknown. The purpose of this study is to report long-term follow-up after OLT in a cohort of patients with hepatic
iron overload
. Five liver transplant centers in the United States reported follow-up data on 37 patients receiving a first liver transplant who had severe hepatic
iron overload
in their native livers. Kaplan-Meier 5-year survival among these patients was compared with survival data from all age-matched liver transplantations reported to the United Network for Organ Sharing (UNOS) over the same time period (1987 to 1993). The 5-year survival rate after OLT was 40% in the hepatic
iron overload
group compared with an overall survival rate of 62% for all patient groups from the UNOS registry (P =.0009). Although
sepsis
was the cause of 53% of all deaths occurring within the first year after OLT, cardiac complications accounted for 50% of the late mortality in patients with hepatic
iron overload
. In conclusion, long-term survival after OLT is significantly decreased in patients with hepatic
iron overload
. Infectious and cardiac complications are the most common causes of death in these patients. Further studies are needed to define the relationship between hepatic
iron overload
and mortality and to examine the effect of iron depletion on outcome after OLT in this patient population.
...
PMID:Long-term follow-up after liver transplantation in patients with hepatic iron overload. 1047 37
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