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

The Scottish Liver Transplant Unit is now in its sixth year of existence. We present the outcome of the first 165 transplants which have at least 12 months follow up. The overall patient (n = 143) survival rates at 1, 3 and 5 years were 86.6%, 79.3% and 74.7% and the graft survival rates were 76.9%, 69.1% and 64.8%. The one year survival rate for patients with chronic liver disease (n = 113) was 89.2% compared with 76.6% for acute liver failure (Breslow = 0.05). The one year survival rate for the first 71 patients receiving their primary graft was 81.7% compared with 91.5% for the subsequent 71 patients (Breslow = 0.09). The majority of deaths (n = 29) were due to sepsis (n = 7), at operation (n = 6) or due to graft vascular insufficiency (n = 4). There were two cases of de novo haematological malignancy. The outcome of the first 165 transplants in Scotland compares very well with other countries throughout the world.
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PMID:The outcome of the first 165 orthotopic liver transplants in Scotland. 1021 21

Within a 6-year period from January 1991 to December 1996, 19 patients with Salmonella choleraesuis bacteremia were enrolled for clinical and microbiological analysis. Young children, the elderly and patients with hematological malignancy (36.8%), liver cirrhosis (26.3%), systemic lupus erythematosus (10.5%), chronic renal impairment (10.5%), and peptic ulcer (10.5%) were at high risk of this infection. The ratio of male to female was 3:1. Three cases (15.8%) were nosocomially acquired. Fever (89.5%), chills (57.9%) and anorexia (52.6%) were the most common clinical manifestations. Seven patients (36.8%) presented no gastrointestinal manifestations. Normal white blood cell count was noted in seven patients (36.8%), and neutropenia caused by underlying diseases or severe infection was found in six cases (31.6%). Various types of metastatic focal infections were found, such as septic arthritis, cutaneous infection, spontaneous bacterial peritonitis, and pneumonia. The severe immunocompromised status of patients and the high virulence of this pathogen may contribute to the high case fatality rate (21%). Higher resistance rate to commonly used antimicrobial agents was noted in ampicillin (94.7%), chloramphenicol (89.5%), and TMP/SMZ (63.8%). All strains of S. choleraesuis were susceptible to third-generation cephalosporins and fluoroquinolones. Generally, S. choleraesuis bacteremia should be taken into account in the differential diagnosis of sepsis in immunocompromised patients, even without gastrointestinal manifestations. The third-generation cephalosporins and fluoroquinolones may be the first choice for treatment of this invasive infections.
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PMID:Salmonella choleraesuis bacteremia in southern Taiwan. 1033 Jul 99

Twenty-nine consecutive patients with high-risk hematological malignancy aged from 3 to 58 years underwent an unmanipulated graft from an HLA-identical sibling after an irradiation-free preparative regimen consisting of idarubicin (IDA), 21 mg/m2/day administered by continuous infusion on days -12 and -11, followed by busulphan (BU), 4 mg/kg/day orally from day -7 to -4, and cyclophosphamide (CY), 60 mg/kg/day intravenously on days -3 and -2 (IDA-BUCY2). Most clinically relevant extra-hematological regimen-related toxicities consisted of stomatitis observed in all subjects and hemorrhagic cystitis occurred in five cases (17%) within 100 days after transplant. Six patients (21%) developed a grade 2 acute graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) and three (10%) a grade 3 or 4; extensive chronic GVHD was assessed in nine of 22 (41%) evaluable patients. So far, 12 patients have died and 17 are alive, 16 of whom disease-free, 5-41 months after transplant (median, 15 months). The causes of death were related to GVHD in three patients, to sepsis in one and to disease recurrence in the remaining eight. At present, only one of nine relapsed patients is alive. For all patients the actuarial probability of survival (OS) at 1 and 2 years +/- standard error (s.e.) was 63 +/- 9% and 52 +/- 10%, respectively. The actuarial probabilities of disease-free survival (DFS), relapse and transplant-related mortality (TRM) at both 1 and 2 years +/- s.e. were 53 +/- 9%, 35 +/- 9% and 16 +/- 7%, respectively. These results are encouraging but not substantially different from those obtained in 28 patients with malignancy in advanced phase transplanted after the standard BUCY2 regimen, who had an actuarial probability of OS, DFS, relapse and TRM projected at 10 years +/- s.e. of 54 +/- 10%, 57 +/- 9%, 36 +/- 9% and 11 +/- 6%, respectively. Although the retrospective comparison between the two groups does not seem to show any advantage in the use of the IDA intensified regimen, only a prospective randomized trial could answer this question.
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PMID:Idarubicin intensified BUCY2 regimen in allogeneic unmanipulated transplant for high-risk hematological malignancies. 1118 92

This study reviews the clinical manifestations, causes and frequency of Stomatococcus mucilaginosus bacteremia in neutropenic cancer patients. We analyzed retrospectively all clinical and microbiological records of patients with S. mucilaginosus bacteremia. The incidence was compared with that of other pathogens causing bacteremia during neutropenia for the same period. S. mucilaginosus represented 5.9% of bacteremias in our neutropenic patients. Seven patients with hematologic malignancies and one with breast cancer are described. The common clinical presentation was one of sepsis. All patients presented with damaged mucosal barriers as the probable portal of entry, from either stomatitis or enterocolitis. All patients survived.
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PMID:Bacteremia due to Stomatococcus mucilaginosus in neutropenic patients in the setting of a cancer institute. 1461 56

Clostridial myonecrosis or gas gangrene occurs most frequently in contaminated wounds following trauma or surgery. It is caused by a wide variety of Clostridium species, the most common being Clostridium perfringens. Spontaneous, non-traumatic clostridial myonecrosis is uncommon and is usually associated with gastrointestinal and haematological malignancy, diabetes mellitus and peripheral vascular disease. The case of a previously healthy 16-year-old boy with acute onset of gastrointestinal symptoms, who died of bacterial sepsis without apparent preceding trauma, is presented here. Clostridium fallax was identified as the most probable causative agent. As far as is known, this is the first report of fatal sepsis in humans due to C. fallax, which has been described only rarely as a cause of gas oedema in animals.
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PMID:Clostridium fallax associated with sudden death in a 16-year-old boy. 1515 Mar 41

Pentraxins are a superfamily of conserved proteins induced in response to microbial and inflammatory stimuli. Members of this family include C-reactive protein (CRP) and serum amyloid P component, collectively known as the classical short pentraxins, and the more recently discovered pentraxin 3 (PTX3), a member of the closely related subfamily of the long pentraxins. PTX3 has been shown to be produced in response to microbial infections, and highly elevated levels were reported in patients with sepsis. In this study, PTX3 levels were evaluated in sera of a group of patients with haematological malignancy. Our findings indicate that serum PTX3 was elevated in only 1/11 afebrile episodes, despite evidence of mucositis (median 1.39), in 10/10 episodes of blood stream or target organ infections (median 7.2) but, surprisingly, was normal in 5/5 episodes of invasive aspergillosis (median 1.39). The data suggest that serum PTX3 levels are elevated selectively in response to infection. These disparate responses require further study.
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PMID:Selective induction of pentraxin 3, a soluble innate immune pattern recognition receptor, in infectious episodes in patients with haematological malignancy. 1530 13

Cases of community-acquired Pseudomonas aeruginosa bacteraemia (n = 39) that occurred at a tertiary-care hospital during a 5-year period were analysed retrospectively. The commonest underlying diseases were solid tumour (41%) and haematological malignancy (18%). Most (44%) of the patients were neutropenic, and 39% had septic shock at initial presentation. The 30-day attributable mortality rate was 39%. Two previously healthy patients were identified with fatal P. aeruginosa pneumonia with bacteraemia. P. aeruginosa bacteraemia is a fatal infection that should be considered in the differential diagnosis of patients presenting from the community with rapidly progressive sepsis.
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PMID:Clinical features and outcome of patients with community-acquired Pseudomonas aeruginosa bacteraemia. 1581 73

A 42-year-old male patient with a history of diffuse large B-cell non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (DLBCL) developed a central line-related bacteremia due to the presence of a Gram-negative bacillus, which was difficult to identify conventionally. Sequencing of a partial region of the 16S rRNA gene identified the organism as Roseomonas mucosa with a homology score of 100% with 1003 bases called. Due to difficulties with the phenotypic identification of this genus, coupled with its emergence in line-related bacteremia in hematology patients with malignancy, Roseomonas spp. should be considered in cases of line-related infection in such patients with atypical Gram-negative organisms. Although several cases have been reported in the literature of line-related sepsis due to Roseomonas gilardii, only a few cases have been reported of Roseomonas mucosa infection in patients with hematological malignancy. This report highlights the benefits of the integration of a sequence-based typing approach in the identification of difficult-to-identify bacterial isolates employing partial regions of the 16S rRNA gene. Continued routine adoption of such techniques by clinical diagnostic laboratories may prove beneficial for the correct identification of blood-borne infections, as well as for the correct epidemiological characterization of unusual causal agents of bacteremia in immunocompromised individuals.
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PMID:Central line-related bacteremia due to Roseomonas mucosa in a patient with diffuse large B-cell non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. 1601 92

Underlying disorders, especially those that chronically impair immune host response (e.g., cancers and hematologic malignancies) but also those that acutely impair this response (e.g., major surgery and multiple trauma), increase the incidence of infection and alter the outcome of patients with sepsis. As a part of innate immunity, inflammatory and coagulation responses are lower in patients with underlying disorders than in patients without such disorders, whereas the need for vasopressors and mechanical ventilation is more frequent. Although these patients are older, age-related defects do not appear to be responsible for this lower response, because innate immunity is usually up-regulated in the elderly. Innate immunity seems to be negligibly affected by the direct consequences of underlying disorders, but underlying disorder-related chronic organ insufficiency certainly participates in the observed organ dysfunction, overestimating the infectious insult by itself. Although innate immunity seems not to be actually blunted in patients with underlying disorders, the underlying disorder itself contributes to the severity of the physiological response to sepsis, thereby resulting in a worse outcome.
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PMID:Underlying disorders and their impact on the host response to infection. 1623 51

The infectious complications are an important cause of morbidity and mortality in hematopoietic stem cell transplant (HSCT) recipients. Our retrospective study has the objective to evaluate the incidence, clinical and bacteriologic features of documented infections in these patients. The frequency of infectious complications was analysed in 42 patients with hematologic malignancies who received HSCT from January to December 2002 at Pisa General Hospital. Thirty-three patients underwent autologous HSCT and 9 received allogeneic HSCT. All patients received acyclovir, fluconazole and fluoroquinolones as prophylactic regimen. A total of 38 infectious episodes were recognized in 22 patients during the early post-HSCT period (N=27) and in the late post-HSCT period (N=11). Infectious complications rate correlated positively with the deepness and length of neutropenia in the early period. There were 21 episodes of sepsis (the majority by coagulase negative staphylococci), 2 pneumonias and 1 vertebral osteomyelitis. All staphylococcus strains were, in vitro, resistant to oxacillin and ciprofloxacin and 8 out of 15 gram negative rods were resistant to ciprofloxacin. Most of the infectious complications were cured with appropriated antimicrobial therapy and/or with engraftment and, in 4 cases, with central catheter removal. One patient developed a positive CMV antigenemia; a pre-core mutant form of HBV reactivation was diagnosed in another patient. No cases of invasive fungal infections were recognised. Five patients died but only one from infection (septic shock). Pneumonia was a coexisting cause of death in 2 patient in the late period. We can conclude that most of infectious complications, that occurred in the early period post-HSCT were due to coagulase negative staphylococci and gram negative rods resistant to ciprofloxacin. For this reason, the usefulness of fluoroquinolone prophylaxis in HSCT recipients should be reevaluated.
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PMID:Fluoroquinolone resistance in hematopoietic stem cell transplant recipients with infectious complications. 1627 55


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