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Query: UMLS:C0243026 (
sepsis
)
52,417
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Over a 7 year period, 85 cancer patients were managed by the nutrition service of
St. Joseph
's Hospital, Toronto. All these patients were nutritionally depleted, had obstruction to the gastrointestinal tract, or had postoperative complications such as enterocutaneous fistulas, evisceration or intraabdominal
sepsis
, which left total parenteral nutrition (TPN) as the only means of achieving positive nitrogen balance. A prospective study started in 1970 has found that when cancer was resectable and TPN was started preoperatively and continued postoperatively (24 patients-group 1) until the patient could take a normal diet, no deaths or significant complications occurred. When TPN was first started after life-threatening complications had occurred (53 depleted patients-group 2), the mortality was 17.0%. This mortality was only 4.5% after complications following operations for colon cancer, but was much higher with esophageal, pancreatic and bladder cancer, and especially after complications following surgery where radiotherapy had previously been given to abdomen or pelvis. When TPN was used in inoperable, cachectic patients (8 patients-group 3) to permit them to tolerate radiotherapy or chemotherapy, the mortality was 37.5%. This latter group is small, but TPN is worthwhile in selected patients where significant palliation and improvement in the quality of life can occur.
...
PMID:Specialized nutritional support in the cancer patient: is it worthwhile? 41 70
We evaluated the relationship between PPC and various putative risk factors in a prospective longitudinal study of 1,000 patients undergoing abdominal surgery. Transient subclinical events were excluded by defining PPC as positive clinical findings in combination with either positive sputum microbiology, unexplained pyrexia, or positive chest roentgenographic findings. The overall incidence of PPC was 23.2 percent (232/1,000). Multivariate analysis identified seven factors which were associated with PPC:
ASA
classification greater than 2, upper abdominal surgery, residual intraperitoneal
sepsis
, age greater than 59 years, BMI greater than 25, preoperative hospital stay greater than 4 days, and colorectal or gastroduodenal surgery (overall F score = 33.5, p less than 0.0001). The
ASA
classification was the most powerful indicator of risk in both the univariate and the multivariate analyses. The combination of
ASA
classification greater than 1 and age greater than 59 years identified 88 percent (205 of 232) of the patients who developed PPC. These findings provide clinicians and clinical investigators with a simple means of identifying patients who are at high risk of PPC after abdominal surgery.
...
PMID:A multivariate analysis of the risk of pulmonary complications after laparotomy. 200 96
A multi-institutional study to evaluate the efficacy, clinical application, and safety of extracorporeal shock-wave lithotripsy (ESWL) with the Dornier HM-3 or HM-4 lithotripter for bile duct calculi (BDC) was initiated in September, 1987. Symptomatic patients who entered into this prospective trial had BDC in the common bile duct and/or the intrahepatic, cystic or lobar ducts of the liver that were inaccessible or untreatable by papillotomy or percutaneous stone extraction. The study excluded gallbladder stones. Nasobiliary (54.4%) or transhepatic catheters (10.5%) and T-tube or cholecystostomy tubes (17.5%) or combinations (14.0%) permitted access for radiographic contrast to allow fluoroscopic monitoring of stone position and fragmentation. Exclusion criteria included pregnancy, failure to localize the stone, disturbances of coagulation, pacemakers, or vascular aneurysms or large bones that lie in the focal axis of the shock waves. Eleven institutions treated 42 patients (23 male, 19 female) with BDC; age range was 25 to 95 years (mean +/- SD, 73.5 +/- 13.8) and
ASA
risk category was 1 to 4 (mean, 2.3 +/- 0.8). Fourteen patients (33.3%) had a single BDC; 28 had 2 to 8 stones (mean, 2.7 +/- 1.8) ranging in size from 6 mm to 30 mm (mean, 18.5 +/- 6.4). The majority (66.7%) of patients were postcholecystectomy. The 42 patients received 57 ESWL treatments consisting of 600 to 2400 shocks per treatment (mean, 1924 +/- 289) at 12 to 22 kV (mean, 18.5 +/- 1.9) administered over 20 to 125 minutes (mean, 52.9 +/- 20.8). General anesthesia was used in 32% of the treatments; the majority were treated with epidural or regional block (42.1%), local infiltration (28.1%), or intravenous sedation (38.6%). Fifteen patients (35.7%) required two ESWL treatments. Stone fragmentation occurred in 94.6% of evaluable patients and in 90.4% of ESWL treatments, respectively; however, BDC fragments remained in 59.5% of patients 24 hours after treatment (diameter less than or to 3 mm, 12%; 4 to 9 mm, 16%; greater than or equal to 10 mm, 68%). Some patients (50%) required adjunctive procedures to achieve stone removal that included endoscopic extraction (n = 10; 47.6%), biliary lavage (n = 8; 38.1%), endoscopic bile duct prosthesis (n = 1; 4.8%), and operation (n = 2; 9.5%). ESWL treatment complications during hospitalization were observed in 15 patients (35.7%) and were present in four (9.5%) at discharge. Complications included macrohematuria (5%), biliary pain (15%), biliary
sepsis
(5%), hemobilia (10%), ileus (2.5%), and adverse pulmonary changes (7.5%). One patient developed pancreatitis before ESWL at ERCP that resolved prior to discharge.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Extracorporeal shock-wave lithotripsy of bile duct calculi. An interim report of the Dornier U.S. Bile Duct Lithotripsy Prospective Study. 265 83
Analysis of 156 records relating to patients at the age of 15 to 85 years with extended purulent peritonitis of the surgical and gynecological genesis (the toxic phase, VI category
ASA
) showed that combination of programmed sanitation laparotomy and intensive antibacterial therapy performed as short-term courses before, during and after the operation with an account of the information on the nature of the microbial associations and antibioticograms was an efficient procedure in treatment of severe peritonitis. It was indicated in treatment of patients with polyorgan deficiency. When the surgical treatment was adequate early antibiotic therapy allowed to decrease the number and intensity of postoperative complications: the frequency of abscessing in the abdominal cavity and formation of intestinal fistulas lowered 2 and 1.5 times respectively. Such a decrease was also observed in asthenic patients with lowered protective reactions to development of new infectious foci in the abdominal cavity complicating the peritonitis process. It was also possible to prevent with that procedure the infection generalization and development of peritoneal
sepsis
. With application of the procedure to such patients (20 per cent) lethality lowered 2-fold.
...
PMID:[Antibacterial therapy in disseminated purulent peritonitis]. 281 88
In pathological states associated with hypermetabolism, such as acute
sepsis
, there is marked negative N balance. It has been suggested that the pathway for this response is via leukocyte pyrogen (interleukin I) acting on cyclooxygenase to stimulate prostaglandin release, which then stimulates proteolysis via the lysosomal pathway. In vitro, cyclooxygenase inhibitors decrease proteolysis in muscle tissue from septic rats. We tested this hypothesis in vivo in severely septic patients by using aspirin as the test cyclooxygenase inhibitor. Septic patients (n = 4) were given a primed, constant infusion (183 mg prime, then 37 mg/hr) of 15N-labeled urea for 6 hr to obtain a blood [15N]urea plateau. Blood samples were taken every 30 min. At 180 min 1500 mg of aspirin was given po. If aspirin inhibited protein breakdown, the plateau level should rise, since less cold urea derived from protein breakdown will enter the urea pool.
Aspirin
did not cause any change in either the BUN concentration, its 15N enrichment, or any of the plasma amino acids. In conclusion, cyclooxygenase inhibition by aspirin in vivo does not decrease protein breakdown in hypercatabolic septic patients.
...
PMID:The effect of aspirin on protein breakdown in septic man. 309 51
Twenty-five patients with
sepsis
were studied retrospectively to examine the effects of methylprednisolone on plasma thromboxane B2 levels. Although the plasma iTxB2 level was elevated in patients dying from
sepsis
, the use of glucocorticoids did not reduce plasma iTxB2.
Aspirin
, a cyclo-oxygenase inhibitor, did reduce the plasma iTxB2 value in four patients. It does not appear that glucocorticosteroids significantly affect the conversion of arachidonic acid to thromboxane in septic patients.
...
PMID:Lack of effect of glucocorticoids upon plasma thromboxane in patients in a state of shock. 398 96
Protein degradation in skeletal muscle increases with fever and
sepsis
. Our studies indicate that prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) is an important regulator of muscle proteolysis that seems to signal this increase in fever. When rat skeletal or cardiac muscles were incubated with arachidonate, rates of protein breakdown rose and protein balance became more negative.
Aspirin
or indomethacin, which prevented synthesis of PGE2, markedly reduced this effect. By itself PGE2 stimulated proteolysis without altering protein synthesis. PGE2 seems to increase proteolysis in the lysosomes, inasmuch as leupeptin and Ep-475 inhibit this response. These inhibitors inactivate lysosomal thiol proteases in the muscles without affecting the Ca2+-activated protease. (In fact, complete inactivation of the latter enzyme with mersalyl did not reduce overall proteolysis in the muscles). When muscles from feverish rats were incubated in vitro, they showed greater protein breakdown and PGE2 synthesis than muscles from normal animals. Addition of indomethacin eliminated this difference. Leukocytic pyrogen (interleukin 1), a protein released by monocytes that signals the onset of fever, also seems to signal increased muscle PGE2 synthesis and muscle proteolysis. This protein enhanced both processes dramatically in the isolated muscles. These findings suggest that cyclooxygenase inhibitors may be useful in the treatment of patients showing excessive protein breakdown.
...
PMID:Control of protein degradation in muscle by prostaglandins, Ca2+, and leukocytic pyrogen (interleukin 1). 632 20
Wound infection is a frequent complication and is related to various parameters: type of surgery, patient's age, nutritional status, associated diseases, length of surgery and hospital stay, use of prosthesis and drainage and finally surgeon's ability. The frequency of wound infection is reported between 1.5%-5.1% after "clean surgery" and the greatest source of microbial contamination is due to GRAM positive cocci either aerobic or anaerobic. The Authors present their experience of ultra short-term prophylaxis with Teicoplanin in 375 patients undergoing major ambulatory surgery. Median age was 49 years (15-87 ys); patients over 65 years were 22%. Hernias of the abdominal wall and varicose veins represent the diseases most commonly operated on. In 30% of the cases the patients selected for major ambulatory surgery were in II and III classes according to the standards of the American Society of Anaesthesiologists (
A.S.A.
). The ultra short-term prophylaxis with Teicoplanin was administered as follows: 400 mg, i.v., thirty minutes pre-operatively. The operations were performed under local or loco-regional anaesthesia. The choice of Teicoplanin was based on the strong bactericidal activity on GRAM positive cocci, including the methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus infections, and on the long activity of the drug. The results were considered according to the American College of Surgeons scheme: no wound infection was observed and excellent local and general drug's tolerance were noticed. Ultra short-term prophylaxis in ambulatory surgery was chosen for the following reasons: large use of prosthesis, major risk of
sepsis
in older patients and at last for a badly accepted infective complications in outpatient surgery.
...
PMID:[Teicoplanin in the prevention of wound infections in major ambulatory surgery]. 797 37
Nitric oxide (NO) and prostaglandins (PG) both possess the ability to induce vasodilatation and prevent the aggregation of platelets. The synthesis of these substances is increased following in vivo lipopolysaccharide (LPS) infusion, but their function during
sepsis
is incompletely understood. We studied the role of NO and PG in a murine model of chronic hepatic inflammation (Corynebacterium parvum injection), which is known to progress to sudden hepatic necrosis after LPS injection. NO synthesis, which is induced in hepatocytes by C. parvum treatment and in nonparenchymal cells by LPS treatment, was inhibited using NG-monomethyl-L-arginine (L-NMMA). High-dose aspirin (
ASA
) was used to block PG synthesis. Treatment with L-NMMA or
ASA
alone, in the absence of LPS, resulted in no increase in hepatic injury. C. parvum-treated mice that received both L-NMMA and
ASA
without LPS developed marked hepatic damage as reflected by increased hepatocellular enzyme release (aspartate aminotransferase and L-ornithine carbamoyl-transferase). Marked hepatic damage was seen after LPS administration, and
ASA
pretreatment alone had no effect on the LPS-induced hepatic injury, whereas L-NMMA markedly increased the hepatic damage. The combination of L-NMMA and
ASA
after LPS resulted in the greatest hepatocellular enzyme release, characterized histologically by intravascular thrombosis with diffuse infarction and necrosis. Simultaneous treatment with either PGI2 or L-arginine partially prevented this injury. These data demonstrate that NO and PG function synergistically to maintain hepatocellular integrity; thus increased synthesis of these mediators protects the liver from the pathophysiological effects of LPS in this model.
...
PMID:Nitric oxide and prostaglandins interact to prevent hepatic damage during murine endotoxemia. 802 33
Interleukin-6 (IL-6), a cytokine involved in the pathogenesis of
sepsis
and septic shock, and lymphocyte subpopulations were measured in blood circulation of patients receiving sodium nitroprusside (SNP) for induction of hypotension. The aim of this study was to evaluate whether this procedure influences distribution of lymphocyte subsets and IL-6 response. 30 patients of
ASA
physical status I and II scheduled for nose-septum correction were randomly assigned to the SNP- or control group (without SNP). Patients were anaesthetized with fentanyl, etomidate and isoflurane in 66% nitrous oxide. SNP was administered continuously during 60 min and mean arterial blood pressure was reduced to 50 mmHg. Before and after induction of anaesthesia, 60 min after the beginning of the operation (end of SNP-infusion) and on the first postoperative day, IL-6 plasma concentrations were determined by ELISA. The percentages of B-, T-lymphocytes, T-helper, T-suppressor cells and HLA-DR positive (activated) T-lymphocytes were examined by direct immunofluorescence using monoclonal antibodies. On the first day after surgery IL-6 plasma concentrations were significantly elevated in the SNP-group compared to preoperative values. In this group the values were higher than in control patients [30.5 (10.9-47.5) pg/ml vs. 17.4 (8.5-21.5) pg/ml]. The percentage of HLA-DR positive T-cells was 25.8 +/- 4.9% in the patients with SNP on the first postoperative day; it was significantly higher than in control patients [16.5 +/- 3.7%]. We conclude that SNP-administration increases percentage of activated T-cells and IL-6 secretion.
...
PMID:Increase of interleukin-6 plasma concentrations and HLA-DR positive T-lymphocytes after hypotensive anaesthesia with sodium nitroprusside. 884
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