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

Prophylactic antibiotics are given routinely to patients undergoing surgical treatment of the biliary tract to prevent postoperative infection if risk factors for postoperative sepsis are present. Cefmetazole (CM) is a new broad spectrum parenteral cephamycin antibiotic. This drug possesses a spectrum of activity against a wide range of gram-negative and gram-positive bacteria that is similar to cefoxitin (CX), an antibiotic widely used for prophylaxis with operations upon the abdomen. In this study, there was a random selection of two patients to receive CM to every one patient to receive CX. The dose of CM was 1 gram given intravenously every eight hours for three doses beginning 30 minutes before the operation; three doses of CX were given intravenously, 2 grams every six hours. Fifty-two evaluable patients comprised the CM group and 26, the CX group. The risk factors for postoperative infection were acute cholecystitis (CM, seven patients; CX, one patient), evidence from imaging procedure suggesting need for exploration of the common duct (CM, six; CX, one), hyperbilirubinemia (CM, eight; CX, four), hyperamylasemia (CM, 17; CX, seven); age of 60 years or more (CM, six; CX, one), obesity (CM, 36; CX, 14) and diabetes mellitus (CM, four; CX, five). Operative bactibilia and the organisms were comparable in both groups. Postoperative days of fever greater than or equal to 38 degrees C. (oral) (CM, 0.83 +/- 1.20; CX, 0.58 +/- 0.96) and hospitalization (CM, 6.59 +/- 2.20; CX, 5.04 +/- 1.26) were similar. Postoperative septic complications at the operative site occurred in two patients in the CM group (4 per cent) and in none of the patients in the CX group (p = 0.4; N.S., Fischer exact test). These two antibiotics had similar efficiency in preventing postoperative infections.
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PMID:Controlled comparison of cefmetazole with cefoxitin for prophylaxis in elective cholecystectomy. 240 23

A number of different organisms can be isolated from intraabdominal infection. The most common are aerobic Gram-negative bacilli. Anaerobes are not unusual. From June 1989 to January 1990, Cefmetazole was administered to 23 patients with intraabdominal infection at Veterans General Hospital-Taipei. There were six patients with spontaneous bacterial peritonitis, five biliary tract infection, five liver abscesses, five with pelvic inflammatory disease, one acute ruptured appendicitis and another intraabdominal abscess. In addition, ten patients had sepsis. Clinical response was satisfactory in 21 (91.3%) of 23 patients, and the microbiological eradication rate was 90% (36/40). One patient with Streptococcus and Bacteroides oralis liver abscess relapsed after organism eradication. Therapy failed in a case with Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Bacteroides fragilis infection. This study showed Cefmetazole to be an effective and safe antibiotic for treatment of intraabdominal infection.
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PMID:[Clinical efficacy of cefmetazole in intraabdominal infection]. 828 91

We report a patient with bacterial translocation-associated sepsis who was healthy and did not have any related-background. The 57-year-old male had been well until 16 hours before admission, when nausea and vomiting gradually developed and increased in intensity. In the morning of May 22, 2002, he had shaking chills, temperature of 38.6 degrees C and watery diarrhea, and was admitted to Kawasaki Municipal Hospital. On admission, temperature was 40.7 degrees C but otherwise physical examination revealed no particular abnormality. Laboratory data showed total white blood cells of 28,400/microliter, platelet count of 130,000/microliter, creatinine of 2.0 mg/dl and C-reactive protein of 7.5 mg/dl. 1 g of cefmetazole was administered every eight hours. In the early morning of May 23, he suddenly went into shock. At that time, laboratory findings revealed total white blood cells of 33,700/microliter, platelet count of 65,000/microliter, C-reactive protein of 24.9 mg/dl, creatinine of 5.6 mg/dl and serum potassium concentration of 5.7 mEq/l. Gram positive cocci and gram negative rods were isolated from blood culture obtained on admission. Cefmetazole was changed to 1.5 g/day of imipenem/cilastatin sodium and 600 mg/day of clindamycin. In addition, hemodialysis and endotoxin removal with an adsorbent column using polymyxin B were performed. Bacteria detected in the blood on admission were identified as Klebsiela oxytoca and Enterococcus faecium. Imipenem/cilastatin sodium and clindamycin were continued for 13 days. The patient recovered fully and was discharged on June 11. This case suggests that bacterial translocation-associated sepsis might occur even in a hitherto healthy adult.
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PMID:[A case of probable bacterial translocation-associated sepsis in healthy adult]. 1510 13