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

One hundred porous surface replacements (PSR) were performed in 92 patients (63 men and 29 women) with a mean age of 53 (range 17-76). Follow-up times range from 1 to 4 years, with 48 patients having a follow-up of at least 2 years. Preoperative diagnoses were osteoarthritis (OA) 63, osteonecrosis (ON) 13, dysplasia 9, rheumatoid-ankylosing spondylitis 6, and other 9. Seventeen hips had metal-backed acrylic-fixed THARIES acetabular sockets, nine hips had a porous cobalt chrome hemispheric beaded acetabular component with adjuvant fixation screws and externally protruding screw hubs, and 74 hips had a porous chamfered cylinder-design acetabulum. Pain relief had been immediate and more complete than with acrylic-fixed or biologic-ingrowth stem-type replacement with comparable walking and function improvements. There have been no major systemic complications, sepsis, or loosening. There have been two transient peroneal nerve palsies and three trochanteric fibrous unions. There have been three reoperations, one for subluxation, one for "metalosis" due to mesh pad loosening, and one femoral neck fracture. Examination of one removed femoral surface component which has been histologically sectioned revealed excellent (90%) bone in-growth. Circumferential progressive radiolucencies developed at the bone-cement interface by 1 year in all of the 17 acrylic-fixed acetabular components. Reaming or seating defects were noted in 25% of the ingrowth components on postoperative radiographs. Radiographic analysis of immediate postoperative films of the chamfered cylinder design acetabular components frequently demonstrated bone-component interface radiolucencies which represented component seating defects. These initial interface radiolucencies became progressively more narrow over the first six months postoperatively suggesting "healing" of the reamed bone-component interface with trabecular bone around the chamfered cylinder acetabular components. Partial healing of initial interface voids with residual narrow radiolucencies were typical of the nine hemispheric-design acetabula with adjuvant screws and screw hubs. This new porous surface replacement (PSR) of the hip using porous ingrowth fixation avoids the major disadvantages of acrylic-fixed SR: excessive acetabular reaming and difficulty with acetabular revision. (When conversion to stem-type replacement is necessary the modular polyethylene socket liner can be exchanged.) The PSR has the prospect of enhanced fixation and improved longterm durability.
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PMID:Porous surface replacement of the hip with chamfered-cylinder component. 335 70

Fifty-seven porous surface replacements (PSR) were performed in 53 patients (36 men and 17 women) with a mean age of 54 years (range, 19-75 years). Follow-up examination times ranged from one year to 2.5 years with 33 patients having follow-up periods of at least two years. Preoperative diagnoses were osteoarthritis (OA), 37; osteonecrosis (ON), six; dysplasia, nine; rheumatoid ankylosing spondylitis, three; and other, two. Sixteen hips had metal-backed acrylic-fixed THARIES (total hip articular replacement by internal eccentric shells) acetabular sockets, nine hips had a cobalt chrome hemispherical beaded acetabular component with adjuvant screws, and 32 hips had a chamfer-cylinder designed acetabulum. Pain relief has been immediate and more complete than with acrylic-fixed or biologic-in-growth stem-type replacements with comparable walking and function improvements. There have been no major systemic complications, sepsis, or loosening. There have been two transient peroneal nerve palsies and three trochanteric fibrous unions. There has been one subluxation requiring reoperation. Histologic sections of the removed femoral surface component showed excellent (90%) bone ingrowth. Circumferential progressive radiolucencies developed at the bone-cement interface by one year in all of the 16 acrylic-fixed acetabular components. Reaming or seating defects were noted in 25% of the patients on postoperative radiographs. Serial radiographic analyses demonstrate progressive narrowing of all of the chamfered cylinder design and less in hemispherical design with screw fixation. These observations are encouraging and suggest healing of the bone-component interface with bony trabeculae in the porous-coated acetabular design. This new surface replacement (SR) of the hip uses porous-ingrowth fixation to overcome the major disadvantages of acrylic-fixed SR which are as follows: (1) excessive acetabular reaming, (2) poor long-term fixation, and (3) difficulty with acetabular revision.
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PMID:Porous surface replacement of the hip with chamfer cylinder design. 362 14

Adults who have osteoarthritis that is secondary to mild congenital dysplasia can be treated with total hip replacement using customary techniques. Those who have severe acetabular dysplasia or total congenital dislocation usually require augmentation of acetabular bone stock in order to carry out the total hip replacement. We reviewed the results of forty-seven total hip replacements in thirty-eight patients (age range, sixteen to sixty-eight years; average age, forty-seven years) who required autogenous grafting with bone from the femoral head for severe acetabular deficiency. The average length of follow-up was 7.1 years (minimum, five years). All grafts united. The average preoperative Harris hip rating was 46 points and the average postoperative rating was 74 points. Five hips (approximately 10 per cent) had a failure that required reoperation; four hipshad aseptic loosening of the acetabular component and in the fifth sepsis developed after a reoperation to reattach the greater trochanter. For the remaining forty-two hips, the average postoperative Harris hip rating was 78 points. Six additional sockets (approximately 15 per cent) were definitely loose by radiographic criteria, making a total of ten hips (approximately 20 per cent) with definite aseptic loosening of the acetabular component. The major factors that contributed to this aseptic loosening were complexity of the surgical procedure, necessity for a graft, lack of a small-sized metal-backed acetabular component, young age, obesity, lack of posterior support, and resorption of the graft. Dislocation was common, occurring in five (approximately 10 per cent) of the hips.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Femoral head autografting to augment acetabular deficiency in patients requiring total hip replacement. A minimum five-year and an average seven-year follow-up study. 377 5

Thirty-nine cadaveric renal allografts were performed in 28 children under 6 years of age. Common primary renal diseases were glomerulonephritis, dysplasia/hypoplasia, and reflux/obstructive nephropathy. After a mean follow-up of 40 months of patients with surviving grafts, 19 patients had functioning grafts, 3 had returned to dialysis, and 6 had died. These children required an extraordinary amount of care postoperatively because of anorexia, diarrhea, and ileus. Their psychomotor and physical development was retarded prior to transplant; this reversed dramatically after transplant, but catch-up growth occurred in only 4 patients. Many patients were noticeably more active and distractible for 1 to 2 years post-transplant. Major causes of graft failure were primary nonfunction of 5 donor kidneys (4 from donors under 1 year old) and renal vessel thrombosis in 5 recipients (3 with native kidneys in place who received kidneys from donors over 10 years old). Other causes were recurrence of hemolytic uremic syndrome and Wilms tumor, rejection, and sepsis. Kidneys from donors under 1 year old proved unsatisfactory, and large donor kidneys in small children tended to thrombose, especially when native kidneys with high urine output were left in situ.
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PMID:Cadaveric renal transplants in children under 6 years of age. 636 47

Between January 1978 and December 1982 successful sequential chromosome analyses were carried out on bone marrow cells of five patients previously treated for Hodgkin's lymphoma (HL) presenting unexplained cytopenia or pancytopenia during follow-up. All patients had concurrent morphological examination of bone marrow specimens showing signs of dysplasia and/or hypoplasia, without leukaemic infiltrate. Six other patients treated for HL who had normal haematological parameters served as controls. All the patients with unexplained cytopenias had clonal chromosome abnormalities; monosomy for chromosome No. 5 was the most frequent. No abnormalities were detected in the control group. Two patients have evolved to resistant leukaemia, one died of sepsis before leukaemic conversion while severely neutropenic, and two are in full marrow and cytogenetic recovery after aggressive anti-leukaemic treatment in the pre-leukaemic phase. Our data suggest that cytogenetic studies may be of crucial value in detecting therapy-induced preleukaemia (t-PL) at an early stage of its evolution and in planning appropriate therapy before the establishment of overt leukaemia.
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PMID:Therapy-induced preleukaemia in patients treated for Hodgkin's lymphoma: clinical and therapeutic relevance of sequential chromosome banding studies. 646 72

The immune system was studied in 30 cases of local infection (pneumonia) and 56 cases of generalized infection (sepsis). Predominantly children with immunologic deficiency of the humoral type (77% of the cases) characterized by unscheduled fatty transformation of the thymus, underdevelopment of B-zones of lymphoid organs, low level of IgM production and the lack of IgG and IgA production were found to die with pneumonia, whereas children with physiological immaturity of the immune system and in smaller numbers (41% of the cases) with deficiency of immunity of the cellular and phagocytic type as confirmed by immaturity of the thymic tissue or its dysplasia with hypoplasia of lymphoid organs died with sepsis. Immunological deficiency of the humoral type is accompanied by suppurative destructive lesions of the respiratory organs, immunodeficiency of the cellular and phagocytic type by necrotic changes in the septic focus and mucous membranes of the organs contacting the environment.
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PMID:[The immune system and its relation with infection process in children]. 660 38

Sixty-six patients were revised for aseptic loosening of their conventional hip arthroplasties; follow-up periods ranged from one to nine years. In comparing them with an overall conventional arthroplasty series, there was a higher failure rate with dysplasia and post-traumatic patients, and a lower incidence in osteoarthritic and rheumatoid patients. The average time to revision was four years. The patients were eight years younger than those in the overall UCLA conventional hip arthroplasty series. Forty-two per cent had undergone hip surgery prior to the original hip arthroplasty that failed. The average improvement, as well as the follow-up pain, walking, and function ratings, and the postoperative flexion arc were less than those in the overall conventional arthroplasty series. The quality of femoral and acetabular fixation obtained at revision was considerably inferior to that of the primary surgery. Six patients (9%) have already required re-revision of their hip arthroplasties. In a further 20%, the radiolucencies progressed substantially in extent and width, and are radiographically loose. Although these patients are relatively asymptomatic, prognosis is guarded. Forty-four per cent had no complications and are radiographically well fixed. Other complications included trochanteric migration (7.6%), dislocation (10.6%), and peroneal nerve palsy (7.6%), but there were no deaths or other serious medical complications and only one case (1.5%) of sepsis.
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PMID:Revision of aseptic loose total hip arthroplasties. 712 49

In 17 cases of revision surgery performed for failed surface arthroplasty of the hip at UCLA medical center, the minimum follow-up period was six months (average, 22 months). Causes of failure included aseptic loosening (15), sepsis (1), and unexplained pain (1). High-risk groups include those with deficiencies of bone stock, congenital dysplasia, coxa vara, and osteonecrosis. Nine hips were resurfaced and eight converted to conventional arthroplasties. The clinical results of revision and conversion were comparable with those of conventional revision surgery but less satisfactory than those of primary surgery. Fewer technical problems and complications were encountered when compared with conventional revision. The length of operation and blood loss were less, and there were no instances of sepsis, nerve palsy, instability, or femoral fracture. The major complication has been recurrent loosening, with a 17% incidence of failure requiring conversion to conventional replacement. The results, as in conventional revisions, have been suboptimal. The technical complexities have been many, especially with respect to femoral and acetabular revision.
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PMID:Revision surgery for failed surface arthroplasty of the hip. 712 63

Interleukin-1 (IL-1) is one of several proinflammatory cytokines produced during infection, sepsis, and the systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS) that serves to initiate the host inflammatory response and to integrate nonspecific immunity. Many of IL-1's biologic effects are beneficial to the host in times of stress, but when produced for extended periods of time or in excessive quantities, IL-1 contributes to morbidity and mortality. In fact, excessive IL-1 production has been directly linked to the development of hypotension, shock, multi-organ system failure, hematologic dyscrasia, and death in patients and animals with sepsis, SIRS, and septic shock. Recent research interest has focused on IL-1 inhibition to improve outcome in sepsis and septic shock. This article will review the role for IL-1 in sepsis and septic shock, and the function and status of the IL-1 receptors and IL-1 receptor antagonist in modulating IL-1 actions. The results of investigations of IL-1 inhibition in animal models and in human subjects with sepsis and septic shock will also be reviewed.
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PMID:Interleukin-1 and interleukin-1 antagonism in sepsis, systemic inflammatory response syndrome, and septic shock. 760 Jan 91

Septic shock following gram-negative infection is a leading cause of mortality in critically ill patients, accounting for nearly 200,000 deaths a year. The exaggerated production of tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF alpha) is known to contribute to hemodynamic collapse and the hematological dyscrasia associated with gram-negative sepsis. Although previous studies have shown TNF alpha antibodies and TNF immunoadhesins to be effective in experimental gram-negative sepsis, we postulated that administration of a novel construct of two modified soluble p55 receptors linked to polyethylene glycol (PEG-BP-30) would also attenuate the hemodynamic and hematologic alterations to lethal Escherichia coli septic shock in non-human primates. Nine adult female and male baboons (Papio anubis), weighing 10-17 kg, were anesthetized and invasively monitored. The nine animals were randomized to receive either 0.2 mg/kg body wt PEG-BP-30 (n = 3), 5.0 mg/kg body wt PEG-BP-30 (n = 3), or placebo (n = 3). One hour after pretreatment, animals were infused with 5-10 x 10(10) CFU/kg of live E. coli iv and vital signs were recorded for the next 8 hr. Arterial blood was drawn for baseline parameters and throughout the study to obtain total and differential white blood cell and platelet counts and cytokine levels (TNF alpha, IL-1 beta, IL-6, IL-8). E. coli bacteremic baboons receiving only placebo demonstrated a significant fall in mean blood pressure and leukopenia. Two of the three animals expired. In contrast, five of the six baboons receiving the PEG-BP-30 survived and these animals exhibited markedly attenuated declines in blood pressure and leukocyte numbers.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:PEG-BP-30 monotherapy attenuates the cytokine-mediated inflammatory cascade in baboon Escherichia coli septic shock. 763 Jan 20


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