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Query: UMLS:C0243026 (
sepsis
)
52,417
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In over 1000 cancer patients treated with intravenous hyperalimentation (IVH),
tumor growth
has not been identified and catheter-related
sepsis
has been minimal. Studies in rats demonstrated that the host benefits more than the tumor during nutritional repletion, and any stimulation of
tumor growth
in the rat-tumor model could be manipulated with DNA specific drugs to benefit the host. A study of 65 malnourished cancer patients undergoing oncologic therapy and treated with IVH indicated that much of the immune suppression in these patients was the result of malnutrition coincident with or secondary to oncologic treatment. Conclusions reached in this study were that nutritional repletion resulted in a return of skin test reactivity, proper wound healing in the surgical patient, and possibly an increase in response to chemotherapy. Certainly, the use of IVH allowed specific oncologic therapy to be administered to a group of malnourished patients who otherwise might not have been acceptable candidates for intensive antineoplastic therapy.
...
PMID:Nutrition, cancer, and intravenous hyperalimentation. 10 87
Host starvation is a common accompaniment to the presence of cancer. Diminished intake is a major contributor to this starvation and does not require that the oropharynx or gastrointestinal tract be the primary site. There is suggestive evidence that the normal adaptive mechanisms of the nontumor-bearing host to starvation that result in body protein conservation are not functioning in the tumor-bearing host. Cancer cachexia has some similarity to the metabolic disturbances of host metabolism that are seen in major injury or
sepsis
. The growing tumor shows little respect for normal constraints of host tissue growth. With the widespread availability of methods of total parenteral nutrition, the interrelationship of nutrition and host-
tumor growth
assumes greater importance.
...
PMID:Uncomplicated starvation versus cancer cachexia. 86 53
Rhabdoid tumor of the kidney (RTK), originally described as a monophasic sarcomatous variant of Wilms' tumor, is now recognized as a highly malignant, non-Wilms' tumor possibly of neuroectodermal origin. Twenty-one National Wilms' Tumor Study patients with this tumor were treated in the years 1969 through 1978. Mean patient age was 18 months with 16 of the 21 younger than 2 years at diagnosis. Two patients were Stage 1, 10 Stage II, 5 Stage III, and 4 Stage IV. One patient only is continuously disease free and another is surviving disease free following excision of bilateral pulmonary metastases. One patient died of
sepsis
early during therapy. Thus 18 of the 19 patients who relapsed died, 15 within 1 year of diagnosis, all with progressive
tumor growth
. The rapid appearance of metastases (mean 4 months), often to multiple sites, and short subsequent survival signal a very malignant tumor resistant to current treatment stratagems.
...
PMID:Clinical aspects of the rhabdoid tumor of the kidney: a report of the National Wilms' Tumor Study Group. 631 Mar 57
Over 1,500 patients at our institution have received intravenous hyperalimentation (IVH) as nutritional support for nutritional rehabilitation prior to and/or during oncologic therapy. Stimulation of
tumor growth
has not been identified, and septic and metabolic complications of this technique have been minimal. Nutritional repletion resulted in return of immunocompetence and was associated with a reduction in
sepsis
, proper wound healing, and an apparent increase in tumor response to chemotherapy. If these observations were related as cause and effect, then a method of restoring and maintaining adequate nutrition should be added to the armamentarium of the oncologist. The use of IVh allowed specific oncologic therapy to be administered to a group of malnourished patients who otherwise might not have been acceptable candidates for intensive antineoplastic therapy.
...
PMID:Nutrition and cancer. 678 9
We investigated the use of ornithine alpha-ketoglutarate in treatment of rats bearing Morris hepatoma 7777. Rats received diets containing either ornithine alpha-ketoglutarate, which has been used in other catabolic states (i.e. injury,
sepsis
), or an isonitrogenous, isocaloric diet containing glycine. Untreated tumors grew to a mass of 11 g/100 g body weight over the 3-wk period after implantation and induced progressive anorexia, negative nitrogen balance, and body and tissue wasting. Compared with glycine, ornithine alpha-ketoglutarate had no effect on
tumor growth
, but also did not alter the catabolic effects of the tumor on its host. We hypothesized that capture of amino acids by the tumor limited the efficacy of supplemental nutrition here and in published reports in which tumor burden comprised 4-30% of body weight. This is supported by our observation that a 3-wk of implantation the rate of protein deposition plus amino acid oxidation by the tumor was equivalent to approximately 70% of the host's daily protein intake. To parallel the clinical situation in which tumor burden is small at diagnosis and initiation of treatment, the same diets were tested in rats treated by excision of the tumor at a limited stage of the disease. Rats received 3 d preoperative nutrition with ornithine alpha-ketoglutarate or glycine, and continued on the same diets for 3 or 6 d postoperatively. Compared with glycine-fed rats, ornithine alpha-ketoglutarate-fed rats showed a more positive nitrogen balance, higher concentrations of glutamine and branched-chain amino acids in muscle, and accelerated protein deposition in small intestine (P < 0.05). Our results explain the lack of success of nutritional support in untreated cancer and underline the need for clinically relevant animal models for further studies.
...
PMID:Supplemental nutrition with ornithine alpha-ketoglutarate in rats with cancer-associated cachexia: surgical treatment of the tumor improves efficacy of nutritional support. 750 Jan 78
Interleukin-6 is a pleiotropic cytokine and may be a pivotal mediator in the pathogenesis of shock and
sepsis
, in modulating megakaryocytopoiesis, and in inhibition of
tumor growth
. Among characteristics of interleukin-6 are regulation of expression of other cytokines, induction of differentiation and proliferation of normal and malignant cells, and inhibition of
tumor growth
in vivo under experimental conditions. As a major inducer of the acute phase response, interleukin-6 is produced and sets off a chain of events as it acts on effector targets. Preclinical anti-tumor studies with interleukin-6 have provided rationale for probing its role in the therapy of malignancy. The probability is that in the near future interleukin-6 will have established clinical roles as a protein of diagnostic and therapeutic import.
...
PMID:Interleukin-6: a cytokine with potential diagnostic and therapeutic roles. 820 Dec 59
GBS toxin is a polysaccharide exotoxin produced by group B Streptococcus. This organism causes
sepsis
and respiratory distress in human neonates (so-called early onset disease). This disease is marked by a strong inflammatory response only in the lung, with pulmonary sequestration of granulocytes and extensive capillary endothelial damage, and occurs only during the first few days after birth. We have found that a similar inflammatory response can be induced by i.v. infusion of picomole quantities of GBS toxin in the developing vasculature of transplanted tumors in mice and can significantly retard the
tumor growth
. When optimum treatment with GBS toxin was started shortly after tumor implantation, a majority of tumors in the mice regressed and the mice remained tumor-free for over 5 months. Some tumors regressed in mice receiving short-term treatment with GBS toxin, but recurred after the treatment was stopped. Median survival times were extended by all regimens and all doses of GBS toxin tested. No evidence of toxicity to the vasculature of other tissues was observed. GBS toxin is being tested for cancer therapy in humans.
...
PMID:Effects of group B Streptococcus toxin on long-term survival of mice bearing transplanted Madison lung tumors. 820 46
Liposomes have been used therapeutically to deliver drugs to certain anatomical sites. The use of liposomes to deliver antigens, although not a new concept, has received less attention. At least two vaccines of nearly identical liposome base composition to our vaccines have been tested in humans. A malaria vaccine study showed that the liposomal preparation is quite safe: reaction profiles of volunteers receiving the vaccine demonstrated little reactivity and virtually no pyrogenicity (14). The concentration of MPLA in the vaccine was substantially higher (nearly 50,000 times) than the pyrogenic dose of free lipid A. The same vaccine, but different antigen (gp120, an HIV protein), was tested in volunteers and had the same lack of toxicity (27). In both studies, antibodies and cytotoxic cells specific for the respective antigens were produced. We have several subunit vaccines under development for infectious diseases (gram negative
sepsis
, fungal infections, protozoan infections), metabolic disorders (hypercholesterolemia, diabetic retinopathy, macular degeneration), and neoplastic diseases (multi-drug resistant cancer, primary and metastatic tumors, and angiogenic hyperproliferative disorders). In each case, one or more antigens were identified that might be useful in immunologic control of biologic proliferation (i.e., pathogen or
tumor growth
, rise in serum cholesterol, growth of blood vessels). We anticipate that at least one of these vaccines will be ready for testing in humans in the next calendar year.
...
PMID:Liposomal vaccines. 864 17
During
tumor growth
, anorexia and reduced food intake markedly contribute to the development of malnutrition, thus worsening overall patients' survival. A better understanding of the pathophysiology of eating behavior may lead to new and more effective therapies, aiming at counteracting the detrimental effects of anorexia and reduced food intake on nutritional status and survival in cancer patients. Brain tryptophan and serotonin concentrations seem to play a pivotal role in the regulation of eating behavior. Increased brain serotonin activity is indeed associated with a reduction of food intake. It has been recently hypothesized that increased availability of tryptophan to the brain and the consequent increased serotonin activity may represent the pathogenic mechanism for cancer-associated anorexia. According to this hypothesis, the modulation of brain serotonin activity may result in an improvement of anorexia. Reducing brain tryptophan availability represents a possible mechanism to restore brain serotonin activity to normal. There is evidence that the oral administration of neutral amino acids competing with tryptophan for brain entry results in a significant improvement of cancer anorexia. The same treatment may also be effective in improving secondary anorexia, which is associated with other chronic illnesses, including renal and liver failure,
sepsis
, and so forth, sharing a similar pathogenic mechanism.
...
PMID:Cancer anorexia: new pathogenic and therapeutic insights. 885 Feb 21
Over the last years numerous studies have focussed on the in vivo expression of tissue factor (TF) in health and disease. The selective perivascular distribution of TF and the lethal effects of TF knockouts have added strong support to the widely accepted view that TF plays a pivotal role in the initiation of blood coagulation during physiological hemostasis. Inappropriate in vivo expression of TF, particularly by cells that do not express this protein under normal conditions (mainly monocyte-macrophages and endothelial cells), has been documented and is likely responsible for fibrin deposition in a variety of pathological conditions, among which
sepsis
-associated disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) and thromboembolic disease. In malignancy, in vivo expression of TF by tumor cells and/or by host cells has been implicated not only in intratumoral and systemic activation of blood coagulation but also in
tumor growth
and dissemination.
...
PMID:Tissue factor in health and disease. 919 52
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