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Query: UMLS:C0243026 (
sepsis
)
52,417
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The typical factors responsible for post operative jaundice are: 1) increased pigment load; 2) hypoperfusion; 3)
sepsis
and 4) drugs. In the patient evaluation, one should carefully review the patients chart for hypotensive episode during surgery, the drugs being administerd and the evolution of the illness which will facilitate the identification of the causal factors. Aside the aminotransferase,
alkaline phosphatase
and bilirubin levels, the risk of hemolysis, of
sepsis
, the synthetic function of the liver and the integrity of the biliary tree must be established. Post-operative jaundices appear quite often in a context of multiple etiology. However, it is very important to know when surgery is hazardous and when it is mandatory and lifesaving.
...
PMID:[Diagnosis of post-operative jaundice (author's transl)]. 11 38
Chronic neutrophilic leukemia is a rare, infrequently recognized, myeloproliferative disorder. It usually manifests as a leukemoid reaction, with mostly mature granulocytes in the peripheral blood, with rare to occasional immature forms, and sometimes with normoblasts. The clinical manifestations also include hepatosplenomegaly, elevated leukocytic
alkaline phosphatase
, elevated serum vitamin B12 and serum vitamin B12 binder ("R" fraction), and elevated serum uric acid. Distinction from a leukemegaly, the absence of
sepsis
, usually normal erythrocytic sedimentation, and the absence of fever. Leukemoid reactions may be associated with elevated serum vitamin B12 and uric acid, but the levels are usually lower than those found in chronic neutrophilic leukemia. Many patients have gouty symptoms, especially after treatment with Busulfan, and many have an unexplained hemorrhagic tendency, making major operations a risk. The authors add two cases to the 11 previously described.
...
PMID:Chronic neutrophilic leukemia. Report of two cases and review of the literature. 28 88
Ceforanide, a new cephalosporin antibiotic with a long half-life (3 h), can be administered twice daily. We evaluated its antimicrobial activity, pharmacology, and clinical efficacy. Twenty-seven patients with infections due to susceptible organisms received ceforanide, 0.5, 1, or 2 g, intramuscularly or intravenously every 12 h for 6 to 28 days. In vitro studies with the clinical isolates from 27 patients treated plus 263 additional isolates showed that ceforanide was active against cephalothin-susceptible gram-positive and gram-negative microorganisms. In addition, ceforanide inhibited 65% of cephalothin-resistant Escherichia coli and 65% of Enterobacter spp. at </=12.5 mug/ml. After a single 1-g intramuscular dose, the mean peak plasma concentration at 1 h was 48.9 mug/ml and that at 12 h was 4.7 mug/ml. Plasma accumulation occurred in some patients. The infections included 10 pneumonias, 3 with bacteremia and 1 with empyema; 11 soft tissue infections, 4 with abscesses and 3 with
sepsis
; and 3 urinary tract infections. One case each of endocarditis, osteomyelitis, and septic thrombophlebitis, all due to Staphylococcus aureus, were treated. Clinical response was satisfactory in all patients; bacteriological response was satisfactory in 26 of 27 patients. Ceforanide was well tolerated. Three patients developed mild increases in liver enzymes, and one developed slight eosinophilia. In another case, the antibiotic was discontinued because of a fivefold rise in serum glutamic-oxalacetic transaminase (aspartate aminotransferase) and serum glutamic-pyruvic transaminase (alanine aminotransferase) and a twofold rise in lactic acid dehydrogenase and
alkaline phosphatase
.
...
PMID:Ceforanide: in vitro and clinical evaluation. 50 95
To determine whether or not kinin activation in the blood during severe infection with gram-negative bacteria may be related to hemodynamic abnormalities encountered, blood prekallikrein, kallikrein inhibitor and kinin values in 2l surgical patients with
sepsis
were compared with those in normotensive and hypotensive states. Because of reduced prekallikrein synthesis in patients with hepatic insufficiency, the normotensive and hypotensive groups were each subdivided according to the presence or absence of liver dysfunction, as indicated by elevated blood bilirubin, serum glutamic-oxalacetic transaminase or
alkaline phosphatase
levels. The mortality was zero in group 1, normotensive normal liver function; 80 per cent in group 2, hypotensive-normal liver function; 20 per cent in group 3, normotensive liver dysfunction, and 67 per cent in group 4, hypotensive liver dysfunction. Ultimately, the majority of deaths were due to respiratory failure. Although the blood prekallikrein level, was below normal in all groups and was significantly less in all patients with liver dysfunction, it was reduced proportionately in hypotensive patients to less than 30 per cent of the values noted in the two normotensive groups. This finding suggests prekallikrein consumption in the hypotensive groups to be the result of the process of activating kallikrein and bradykinin. This concept is supported by finding elevated kinin values, above 3 nanograms per milliliter of plasma, in only 28 per cent of those in group 1 and 12 per cent of those in group 3, while in the hypotensive patients, groups 2 and 4, the kinin level was elevated in 60 and 66 per cent, respectively.
...
PMID:Kinin activation in the blood of patients with sepsis. 95 70
Jaundice developing in critically ill or injuried patients should probably be thought of as a manifestation of severe
sepsis
until proven otherwise. Septic jaundice occurs in about 50 to 60 per cent of patients with generalized peritonitis. Biochemically, jaundice associated with bilirubin (particularly the direct fraction) and liver enzymes (particularly the
alkaline phosphatase
) and a decrease in the serum albumin. Histologically there is intrahepatic cholestasis. The etiology of these changes in unknown, but they appear to be due to an end organ response to
sepsis
. Optimal treatment involves control of the
sepsis
and maintenance of a glood flow of well-oxygenated blood to the liver.
...
PMID:Hepatobiliary complications of sepsis. 104 57
In a study of fifty patients subjected to cardiac surgery nine (18%) had immediate post-operative liver complications. These included persistente jaundice, an increase in hepatomegaly and elevation of the
alkaline phosphatase
. In these and the rest of the cases there were extra-hepatic complications such as hyposystole, infarct, the post-pericardiotomy syndrome as related to the heart. Pulmonary complications were of infectious nature and a general complication was
sepsis
. These complications were sufficiently important to relate them etiologically to the hepatic disorder. Especially important is right hyposystole and it or tricuspid insufficiency can be blamed for the hepatic disorder in some of these patient. Nonetheless, these hepatic complications are seen less frequently now that we are giving effective treatment to the tricuspid insufficiency during the surgical intervention. We observed the clinical picture known as "benign postoperative cholestasis" in only two patients. Hepatitis with jaundice was seen in four patients during one to three months postoperatively. This was HB hepatitis and its course was more prolonged than that usually seen in Mexico, and it turned into chronic hepatitis in four patients. Biopsies done in one case a six months and in the other at nine months post-operatively showed the picture of chronic aggresive hepatitis. In those patients who did not have hepatic complications a late liver evaluation showed an improvement as compared to the pre-operative condition which was parallel to the hemodynamic improvement.
...
PMID:[Hepatic complications in the postoperative of cardiac surgery]. 123 73
In a series of 78 patients with acute cholangitis, 48 were associated with common duct stones, and in one-third of these, the stones were believed to be primary common duct stones. Even though the clinical presentation of acute cholangitis can be nonspecific with a remarkable absence of physical signs, almost all patients had elevations of serum bilirubin, transaminase and
alkaline phosphatase
levels, an indication of disease of the biliary tree. Initially, all of the patients were treated with antibiotics and most responded rapidly. Escherichia coli and klebsiella were the organisms involved in more than 85 per cent of the positive cultures, and penicillin and an aminoglycoside are recommended as the drugs of choice in acute cholangitis. Diagnostic procedures were then performed, and laparotomy was often not carried out for several days after admission. Eleven of the 78 patients died. Six of the 11 deaths in this series were from continuing or recurrent
sepsis
, and at postmortem examination, a retained stone or inadequately treated stricture was found. This points out the need for adequate diagnostic procedures prior to exploration.
...
PMID:Clinical management of acute cholangitis. 125 17
This paper presents further preliminary results of a trial of the prophylaxis of
sepsis
in 165 patients undergoing vascular surgery. The efficacy and safety of a single dose of teicoplanin was examined and compared with three doses of cephradine plus metronidazole. No significant differences were detected in the prophylactic efficacy in either group. The first interim report indicated abnormalities in liver function, maximum at 7 days, in both groups. These findings are confirmed in this second interim report. Raised levels of GGT and
alkaline phosphatase
are more prominent in patients receiving teicoplanin. Liver function improved by 28 days, however, suggesting that any abnormality is transient.
...
PMID:Teicoplanin vs cephradine and metronidazole in the prophylaxis of sepsis following vascular surgery: an interim analysis of an ongoing trial. 138 43
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the modifications in biochemical parameters before and after the initiation of nutritional therapy, and to observe whether there is a relationship between the patient's development (exitus or improvement) and the presence of
sepsis
. The study was performed on 578 adults treated in our hospital from January 1988 to October 1989. The parameters analyzed were the following: glucose, triglycerides, total proteins, albumin, cholesterol,
alkaline phosphatase
, GOT, GPT, bilirubin, GGT, urea, urates, creatinine and electrolytes. The average initial values of each parameter were compared against those obtained after interrupting the PN by means of the Student t test. The results showed that within the parameters indicating the hepatic function, GGT and
alkaline phosphatase
were those that showed the most significant differences after ceasing the PN. Furthermore, the parameters indicating hepatic function and the electrolytes showed greater variations, regardless of the clinical evolution of the patient (improvement or exitus). The remainder of the parameters showed significant variations based on the clinical evolution.
...
PMID:[Changes in the biochemical parameters during parenteral nutrition. The experience in Hospital de Bellvitge]. 142 Apr 86
The placement of rubber band tourniquets upon rat hind-limbs for 5 h followed by reperfusion of the extremities results in a severe form of circulatory shock characterized by hypotension and death within 24 h of tourniquet release. Oxidative damage to muscle tissue is an early consequence of hind-limb reperfusion on tourniquet release, yet this local damage does not explain the lethal hypotensive shock state which evolves within the next 24 h. Multiple system organ failure (MSOF), of as of yet unknown causes, is usually described in relation to several shock states. It has been suggested that injured or necrotic tissue may activate neutrophils, platelets, and the coagulation system leading to embolization in remote tissues. Effective decreases in hepatic blood flow have been observed in several forms of
sepsis
which precedes the biochemical evidence consistent with an ischemic insult of the liver. In support of our original hypothesis, that organ failure has its genesis in a primary perfusion abnormality with secondary ischemic organ injury, herein we have assessed the possibility that oxygen-derived free radicals are generated in the liver of rats after reperfusion of their hind-limbs on release of the tourniquets. We report on the protective effects of allopurinol (ALLO) and a mixture of superoxide dismutase (SOD) catalase (CAT) and dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO) on liver free sulfhydryl content (SH), thiobarbituric acid-reactive substances (TBARS), and on the release of aspartic acid (AsT) and alanine aminotransferase (AlT) activities, and of
alkaline phosphatase
during a 5 h tourniquet period and after 2 h of reperfusion of the hind-limbs. During the hind-limb ischemic period hepatis tissue SH levels remained essentially constant during the first hour (6.02 +/- 0.36 to 5.65 +/- 0.20 mumoles/g wet tissue), and decreased significantly, over and above the normal circadian decrease of liver glutathione levels, to 4.02 +/- 0.69 mumoles/g wet tissue after the third hour and remained lowered until tourniquet release. A further significant decrease (3.11 +/- 0.49 mumoles/g wet tissue) was observed after 2h of reperfusion. TBARS production remained constant during the 5 h hind-limb ischemic period (168.4 +/- 37.3 mumoles/g wet tissue) and rose by 55% to 261.7 +/- 55.8 mumoles/g wet tissue after 2 h of tourniquet release. ALLO, but not the SOD-CAT-DMSO combination, protected hepatic SH loss during the hind-limb ischemic insult, yet both offered protection after 2 h of tourniquet release.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Oxygen-derived free radicals mediate liver damage in rats subjected to tourniquet shock. 148 82
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