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Query: UMLS:C0243026 (
sepsis
)
52,417
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The aim of this study was to examine the results of a policy in the treatment of acute pancreatitis (AP): initial abstention, management in intensive care unit, surgery in cases of complication (infection and/or failure of medical treatment). The modalities of the surgical treatment were guided by CT scan findings: transperitoneal approach for diffuse lesions, posterior approach for localized lesions. From 1986 to 1994, 57 patients (32 males, 25 females, mean age 59.2 years) were referred to our department for AP. Etiology was gallstones in 29 cases, alcohol in 14 cases (Ranson < 3), moderate in 27 cases (Ranson < or = 5) and serious in 12 cases (Ranson > or = 6). According to the initial CT scan findings (56 cases), 9 patients were classified grade A, 11 grade B, 13 grade C, 8 grade D ans 15 grade E. Thirty eight patients were managed conservatively (mean Ranson stage 3.3), while 19 patients underwent surgical treatment (mean Ranson stage 4.6), in emergency for misdiagnosis (4 cases), or secondarily because of failure of medical management (15 cases). Surgery consisted in necrosectomy with active drainage in 13 cases and drainage alone in 6 cases. Associated maneuvers included: cholecystectomy in 8 cases, cholecystostomy in 2 cases, jejunostomy in 7 cases and
colic
resection for necrosis in 3 cases. Two patients (5%) managed conservatively died (multiple organ failure and cardiac insufficiency) while 4 patients (21%: NS) who underwent surgery died (2 multiple organ failures, 1 septic shock, 1 myocardic infarction). Mortality was correlated with the Ranson score: 42% for serious AP, 3.7% for moderate AP and nil for mild AP (p < 0.01). It was not correlated with CT scan grade, the onset or the type of operation. These results allow us to conclude that surgical treatment should be indicated only in cases of failure of conservative management, the best indication being uncontrolled
sepsis
. In this situation, active drainage provides good results since only one
sepsis
recurred among the 14 patients who underwent this procedure.
...
PMID:[Acute pancreatitis treated in a surgery ward. Apropos of 57 cases]. 899 41
Imaging is required in only a minority of patients with urinary tract infection. Some patients who present with severe loin pain are imaged because ureteric
colic
is suspected. If urinary tract infection does not respond normally to antibiotics, imaging is undertaken to check for evidence of renal obstruction or
sepsis
. Finally, after the acute infection has been treated, imaging is required in some patients to check for factors pre-disposing to renal damage or to relapsing or recurrent infection. This review discusses the appropriate choice of imaging technique to use in each clinical situation and summarises the expected findings.
...
PMID:The role of imaging in adult acute urinary tract infection. 922 97
Acute episodes of unexplained crying in infants may be due to serious and even life-threatening conditions. We present six infants in whom excessive crying was the predominant initial manifestation of
sepsis
for a period of time that ranged from 2 to 10 hours, before other symptoms or signs became evident. This led to a diagnostic delay in two patients who were considered initially to have infant
colic
.
Sepsis
should be considered in the differential diagnosis of acute unexplained crying in infants.
...
PMID:Persistent crying as predominant manifestation of sepsis in infants and newborns. 1022 82
Aim of this study has been to evaluate retrospectively morbidity and mortality of 42 colon substitutions after resection for esophageal cancer. Colon substitution was the intervention of first choice in six patients. In the other patients the stomach was useless, because of previous gastric surgery (n = 14), of gastric involvement by the tumor (n = 21) or technical problem (n = 1). Patients have been separated in 2 groups: from 1969 to 1983 (group A, n = 22), and from 1983 to 1997 (group B, n = 20). Mortality and morbidity (all eventful postoperative course) have been collected for the 30 postoperative days. Total morbidity has been 57% as 77% in group A and 35% in group B (p < 0.05). Cervical and colo-
colic
leak have been the most common complications. Total mortality has been 14% as 22% in group A and 5% in group B (p < 0.1). In group A 3 patients died from anastomosis leak (intrathoracic or intraabdominal) and 2 from medical complications. In group B 1 patient died from unexplained
sepsis
. Our results show significative decrease of morbidity and mortality in group B. These results can be compared to those of gastroplasty for cancer or coloplasty for benign disease. In cancer of the esophagus, if stomach can not be used as substitutes, colon substitution is the best alternative, which can be used without increase of mortality and morbidity.
...
PMID:[Coloplasty after esophagectomy in cancer. A retrospective study of morbidity and mortality]. 1063 31
Long-term survival in patients with cancer of the pancreatic head is disappointing. Surgery is the only curative therapy. Unfortunately the prognosis of patients resected (10-15%) is extremely poor due to loco-regional cancer recurrence (50%). Lymphatic and perineural invasion might account for local recurrence. Japanese studies reported the importance of an extended lymphadenectomy during the classic Whipple exeresis (40% of patients present lymph node metastases). During the period 1996-2000 at our Institution 20 patients (14 M, 6 F, mean age 62.4 years) with pancreatic head cancer (17 adenocarcinoma, 1 lymphoma, 2 carcinoma) underwent Whipple's exeresis with a regional (peripancreatic or R1) and juxta-regional (para-aortic or R2) lymphadenectomy according to Ishikawa technique. R1 nodes consisted of lymph nodes at the pylorus, superior head, common bile duct, anterior pancreaticoduodenal region, inferior head and superior mesenteric vessels. R2 nodes consisted of lymph nodes at the superior body, inferior body, mid
colic
region, common hepatic duct, coeliac truncus and para-aortic region. This wide dissection was quite easy also in patients with a serious cholestatic disease. Intraoperative mortality was 0%. Operative mortality was 5%. Postoperative complications (20%) were 1
sepsis
, 1 hepato-renal syndrome with hepatic coma, 1 mechanical intestinal obstruction, 1 wound infection. Eight patients (40%) died in 6 months in average (neoplastic recurrence 40%). Notwithstanding the advanced disease (stage III 50%; N1+ 50%), twelve patients (60%) have a mean postoperative survival rate of 18.5 (range 1-48) months without neoplastic recurrence. Tumour diameter was less than 4 cm in 83.3% of cases. An earlier diagnosis (with tumour diameter < 4 cm) can improve pancreatic head cancer prognosis. A wide surgical exeresis with a R2 lymph nodes clearance together with surrounding connective and nervous tissue can remove micrometastases with a better control local recurrence.
...
PMID:[Extended lymphadenectomy for carcinoma of pancreatic head. Personal experience]. 1261 Dec 61
The aim of this work was to report some case histories on the usefulness of spiral TC, used for several years both to diagnose renal colic and urinary lithiasis and to study radio lucent stones that are often difficult to be detected with traditional radiology. 13 patients, aged between 31 and 76 (average age: 54.2), were therefore examined. Eight of them had a ureteral
colic
when examined, while five patients had shown symptoms some days before being hospitalised in our ward. In all cases, ultrasonography showed a significant hydronephrosis, while direct radiography of the urinary tract could not detect any images that could be associated with radio-opaque lithiasis. All patients therefore underwent an abdominal spiral TC with no contrast medium within 24 hours after hospitalisation. The confrontation between the results obtained by ultrasonography and those obtained by spiral TC, showed the usefulness of the former method to detect stones located in the proximal ureter or in its intramural tract, while the latter could detect the lithiasis of the proximal ureter in 3 cases (23%), of the mid ureter in 2 cases (15.3%), and of the distal ureter in 8 cases (61%). The stones had, approximately, a 5 mm diameter in 5 cases. In 6 cases the diameter was between 6 and 10 mm, and more than 1 cm in 2 cases. Both methods proved to be equally accurate in the assessment of the hydronephrosis degree and of the thickness of the renal parenchyma. The therapy was medical in 2 cases and open surgery in 3 cases, while 8 patients were treated with ureterolitholapaxy with a ballistic searcher. The usefulness of TC in the study of urolithiasis nowadays is supported by a large literature which clearly supplies with documentary evidence the high sensitivity and specificity of such a method in diagnosing the presence of urolithiasis in general and above all of ureteric stones. Such a method not only makes an accurate evaluation of the stones location possible, but it can also assess the calculi dimensions and the indirect signs of the functionality of the kidney affected, without having to use the contrast medium. This method needs very limited execution times and allows a diagnostic of possible collateral pathologies. The main disadvantage of spiral TC, if compared to conventional radiology, is that the patient is exposed to a larger quantity of ionizing radiations, although such an inconvenience will be overcome by the new and more technologically advanced machines. According to our experience, though based on a limited number of cases, spiral TC allowed us to get a quick diagnosis of radio-lucent lithiasis, to see the seat and dimensions of the calculi and finally to chose the most effective treatment. We can therefore think of a diagnostic protocol, for ureteral colics with hydronephrosis or complicated by hyperpyrexia or
sepsis
, with spiral TC in order to have a quick diagnosis and start the most effective therapy in case an ultrasonographic research should not result diriment.
...
PMID:[The meaning and usefulness of spiral CT for radiolucent ureteric stones diagnosis: our experience]. 1274 46
Infected pancreatic necrosis carries a high morbidity and mortality from
sepsis
and multisystem organ failure. Following confirmation of the infection by CT-guided fine needle aspiration, treatment consists of broad spectrum antibiotics (imipenim-cilastin) followed by emergency open (laparotomy) digital necrosectomy and insertion of drains for postoperative lavage with hyperosmolar dialysate as advocated by Beger et al. This video shows an alternative laparoscopic technique to open necrosectomy and has been used in Dundee since 1994. After elevation of the transverse colon, the lesser sac is opened through the root of the transverse colon between the middle and left
colic
vessels. The necrosectomy is accomplished from inside the lesser sac under vision with a combination of pulsed irrigation and graspers. On completion of the necrosectomy, two large drains are inserted into the lesser sac for postoperative irrigation. The experience with this technique has been favorable with a patient survival of 85%.
...
PMID:Multimedia article. Laparoscopic infracolic necrosectomy for infected pancreatic necrosis. 1497 24
Pyogenic liver abscesses are commonly caused by biliary tract infections. We report here a case of liver abscess developed secondary to a biliary-enteric fistula. A 83 year old diabetic woman was admitted because of
sepsis
due to Klebsiella pneumoniae and E. Coli and with upper right quadrant pain. Six months before admission, a laparoscopic cholecystectomy was performed. The abdominal sonography showed a liver abscess associated with an important aerobilia. The Magnetic Resonance Cholangiography showed a choledocho-
colic
fistula with an important inflammatory background. There was no evidence of neoplasia or inflammatory bowel disease. The evolution was marked by the development of urinary and bronchial tract infection due to Klebsiella. Septic metastasis are characteristics of Klebsiella liver abscesses. Percutaneous drainage associated with a intravenous antibiotherapy was performed.
...
PMID:Klebsiella and E. coli liver abscess associated with aerobilia: a case report. 1546 14
Three patients, men in the ages of 58, 66 and 56 years, respectively, had experienced 'warning colics' a considerable time before gallstone complications or severe recurrent
colic
. Ultrasonographically proven gallstones had not led to cholecystectomy. The 58-year-old man died of
sepsis
due to infected pancreatic necrosis; the other men underwent laparoscopic cholecystectomy, after which they recovered fully. Approximately 10-5% of the adult Dutch population have gallstones, but only 10% will develop symptoms. The annual risk for developing complicated gallstone disease is 1-2% in asymptomatic gallstone carriers. Of patients admitted with complicated gallstone disease, 58% have had prior 'warning colics'. Complicated gallstone disease can be prevented by timely treatment after recognition of warning colics. Cholecystectomy is indicated in patients with intermittent upper-abdominal pain and proven gallstones or sludge.
...
PMID:[Symptomatic gallstone disease: an indication for surgery]. 1735 7
Primary aorto-
colic
fistula is rarely reported in the literature. Although infrequently encountered, it is an important complication since it is usually fatal unless detected. Primary aorto-
colic
fistula is a spontaneous rupture of abdominal aortic aneurysm into the lumen of the adjacent colon loop. Here we report a case of primary aorto-
colic
fistula in a 54-year old male. The fistulated sigmoid colon was repaired by end-to-end anastomosis. Despite inotropic support, the patient died of
sepsis
and multiorgan failure on the first postoperative day.
...
PMID:Rupture of abdominal aortic aneurysm into sigmoid colon: a case report. 1716 50
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