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

Four patients whose rheumatoid arthritis (RA) was complicated by staphylococcal arthritis were identified. All patients had active, long-standing disease with destructive changes. Affected joints included hip (two patients), knee (one patient), and shoulder (one patient). Pain and loss of motion in the affected joint were prominent, but toxic features of pyogenic infections--hectic fever, chills, sweats, local warmth, or erythema--were conspicuously absent. Two patients had moderate fever and three patients had mild leukocytosis. No patient was leukopenic. When present, fever was attributed to infected decubiti or urinary tract infection and treated with antibiotics. Therapy with corticosteroids and nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) probably masked symptoms and delayed the correct diagnosis. Purulent synovial effusions were discovered serendipitously--during arthrography (knee), attempted Girdlestone procedure (hip), and aspiration prior to steroid injection (shoulder). Sepsis was included in the preoperative diagnoses only once (hip). Prior instrumentation (aspiration or injection) of the affected joint was not a feature in any patients, although one patient had undergone insertion of a knee prosthesis one year prior to sepsis. Infectious organisms were Staphylococcus aureus in three patients and Staphylococcus epidermidis in one. Severe sequelae ensued in three of four patients: death from recurrent sepsis (one patient), loss of prosthesis leading to knee arthrodesis (one patient), and protracted sepsis with additional pyarthrosis (one patient). The only patient to regain preseptic joint function (shoulder) had not been on long-standing corticosteroids. Pyarthrosis must be considered in RA patients with unusually painful or stiff joints even in the absence of toxic symptoms.
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PMID:Unrecognized staphylococcal pyarthrosis with rheumatoid arthritis. 408 87

The purpose of this article is to review the most appropriate method for investigating cephalhematomas for possible infection and to clarify the indications for diagnostic aspiration. MEDLINE searches were conducted for the period from 1972 to 1993, and all English-language reports were obtained. A summary of the findings from the reports identified was supplemented by a patient report. Eleven articles reporting 13 infected cephalhematomas were identified in the literature from 1972 to 1993. Escherichia coli was isolated from approximately 50% of the cephalhematomas that were aspirated. Most patients presented with obvious clinical signs of scalp infection, sepsis, meningitis, and/or osteomyelitis. Plain radiographs, bone scans, and enhanced CT scans were limited in their ability to determine if a cephalhematoma was infected unless associated osteomyelitis existed. Aspiration is the diagnostic procedure of choice for cephalhematomas suspected of being infected, as indicated by an increase in size, development of erythema, development of fluctuance, relapse of systemic infection, or a delay in the resolution of clinical symptoms of infection.
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PMID:Cephalhematomas revisited. When should a diagnostic tap be performed? 772 12

During an outbreak caused by group A Neisseria meningitidis in March 1992, groups A and C meningococcal polysaccharide vaccine was administered to 1,168 children aged from 2 to 18 years. Parents were surveyed to ascertain reactions of children to the vaccine and development of invasive group A meningococcal disease after immunization. The most common reactions were mild local pain (21.9%), erythema (12.2%), and swelling at the injection site (7.2%). Only 1.7% of the children experienced fever and 3.7% displayed irritability. The vaccine was well tolerated and all adverse reactions disappeared within 24-48 hours of immunization. No cases of meningitis or sepsis caused by group A meningococci were seen in the 1st 12 months of observation among the vaccinated children.
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PMID:Reactogenicity and safety of meningococcal A and C vaccine in Saudi children. 788 88

Neurosurgical operations have traditionally been classified along the lines of general surgical procedures. A prospective study, during an 18-month period, was undertaken in 2249 patients undergoing neurosurgical procedures to establish and evaluate a method of classifying surgical cases by the use of specific neurosurgical criteria. Patients were placed in one of five categories according to the level and type of contamination at the time of surgery. Infection included all abnormal wounds and was documented as deep when infection occurred beneath the galea (subgaleal pus, osteitis, abscess/empyema, ventriculomeningitis) and as superficial if only the scalp (including wound erythema) was involved. A statistically significant difference in the sepsis rate was found in the different categories (P < 0.0001). Of the 342 "dirty cases," 9.1% of patients developed further wound sepsis. Concomitant cerebrospinal fluid fistulae (44%), second operations (11.8%), and patients with penetrating injuries (9.2%) were the major factors implicated in sepsis in the "contaminated" category (9.7%). In the "clean contaminated" category, a sepsis rate of 6.8% was found. Prolonged surgery (longer than 4 hours) was also implicated in higher infection rates (13.4%). This study strongly supports the separation of patients who have foreign materials implanted (sepsis rate = 6.0%) from "clean" patients, essentially cases categorized as having no known risk factors that may affect sepsis, in whom a sepsis rate of 0.8% was found (P < 0.001). Importantly, surgery for the repair of so-called "clean" neural tube defects in neonates requires separate consideration. An infection rate of 14.8% existed in this subgroup. A uniform system of reporting wound abnormalities is also proposed.
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PMID:Operative sepsis in neurosurgery: a method of classifying surgical cases. 791 Jun 68

An uncommon cause of sepsis in patients with large burns is occult intracompartmental infection. A multi-institution review of 1171 burn admissions identified 5 patients (0.4%) who developed intracompartmental sepsis presenting with fever and purulent drainage or fever, erythema, and swelling on clinical examination. Contributing factors may have included high-volume resuscitation, delayed escharotomy, extravasated intraosseous infusion, cannulation-related arterial injury, and splinting or positioning difficulties. A high index of suspicion and an aggressive surgical approach facilitate successful management of this unusual problem.
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PMID:Intracompartmental sepsis in burn patients. 814 8

Three infants with clinical features of sepsis, hypovolaemia and an acute abdomen were referred to a paediatric surgical unit. Subsequent clinical signs of diffuse macular erythema followed by desquamation and isolation of Staphylococcus aureus from nasal or umbilical swabs led to a diagnosis of staphylococcal toxic shock syndrome. Surgical intervention was not indicated.
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PMID:Surgical presentation of toxic shock syndrome. 826 Mar 45

A 25-year-old patient with lupus erythematosus was admitted with myositis and erythema of the skin under chloroquine therapy. After improvement of clinical symptoms with cyclophosphamide and prednisolone he was again progredient with myositis. The changing of therapy to methotrexate showed a hepatotoxic side effect with elevated liver enzymes. Under subsequent therapy with azathioprine and prednisolone he developed leukopenia and sepsis. Because of persistent erythema of the skin under therapy with different immunosuppressives we performed a therapy with high-dose intravenous immunoglobulins. After application of immunoglobulins we observed an improvement of the erythema after 10 days, which was persistent after dose reduction for about 4 months.
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PMID:[Immunoglobulin therapy for systemic lupus erythematosus]. 834 81

It was proved in the 1980s that human herpesvirus-6 and human parvovirus B19 cause diseases in humans. Human herpesvirus-6, a newly recognized herpesvirus, is a causative agent of exanthem subitum. The virus produces broad clinical features; complications, including fatal outcome, are frequently activated in immunosuppressed conditions such as organ transplantation. Parvovirus B19, a small-DNA virus, infects erythroid progenitor cells. Systemic infection with parvovirus B19 is responsible for several clinical entities, such as erythema infectiosum, arthropathy, aplastic crisis, fetal death, and other disease conditions, including those in immunosuppressed hosts. Reliable diagnostic technologies and carefully designed clinical, immunologic, and virologic studies will fully delineate the clinical significance of both viral infections.
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PMID:Human herpesvirus-6 and parvovirus B19 infections in children. 839 41

Seven patients were identified who underwent both renal transplantation and penile prosthesis implantation at our institution between June 1980 and June 1990, and their charts were retrospectively reviewed. A total of nine penile prostheses were placed in these patients, five prior to transplantation and four following transplantation. One patient received two prostheses prior to transplantation. One patient received a prosthesis both before and after transplantation. No complications were seen in the four prostheses placed following transplantation with a follow-up of one to forty months (mean 18 months). Of the five prostheses placed prior to transplantation, two were removed due to periprosthetic infections, a cylinder leak developed in one, and one was complicated by penile and scrotal erythema with sepsis.
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PMID:Treatment of organic impotence with penile prosthesis in renal transplant patients. 842 73

A case of intestinal perforation associated with SLE is presented. A 54-year-old woman was diagnosed as having SLE twenty-five years ago when she had facial erythema, photosensitivity, oral aphtha, polyarthraliga, leukopenia, positive LE cell and positive antinuclear antibody. She had been treated with prednisolone and admitted to Kushiro City General Hospital because of one month history of fever and anorexia in February 1996. Laboratory findings did not reveal activity of SLE, and a diagnosis of urinary tract infection was made based on the findings of urinalysis. After severe diarrhea, disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) developed. A rectal perforation was revealed by endoscopic and radiological examination. An emergency laparotomy revealed necrosis of the rectum and sigmoidostomy was performed. The biopsied specimen of the rectum were diagnosed as gangrene of ischemic colitis histologically. Because of a penetration to the urinary bladder, an ureterocutaneostomy was performed. She died of sepsis and DIC on the 127th day of admission. Only 11 cases of intestinal perforation associated with SLE have been reported in Japan, and the association of vasculitis has been considered. In the present case, the prolonged use of prednisolone might cause the necrotizing ischemic colitis.
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PMID:[A case of systemic lupus erythematosus developed with intestinal perforation]. 972 61


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