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

Thirteen cases of group D streptococcal neonatal sepsis and/or meningitis were identified at the Cincinnati Children's Hospital from 1970 to 1976. Ages at onset of disease ranged from 1 to 25 days. The most frequent symptoms were fever (five cases), lethargy (five cases), and respiratory difficulty (four cases). Blood cultures for seven infants were positive; CSF cultures for five infants were positive; and CSF and blood cultures for one infant were both positive. In 12 patients, parenteral antibiotic therapy consisted of a penicillin and an aminoglycoside. One infant with a severe meningomyelocele died. The other 12 infants showed a rapid clinical response with seven patients improving within 48 hours of the start of therapy. Infection with group D streptococcus results in a low-grade systemic disease in both full-term and premature infants that responds favorably to appropriate therapy.
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PMID:Systemic group D streptococcal infection in newborn infants. 10 22

In a study of neonatal malaria at the University of Benin Teaching Hospital, we documented the features of six neonates in an effort to highlight that the manifestations of malaria in the newborn cannot be readily distinguished from those of neonatal sepsis. Maternal peripartum fever, an important identifiable risk factor for neonatal sepsis, also featured prominently in the mothers of these babies. These mothers ingested pyrimethamine weekly in the course of their pregnancy. All six neonates were critically ill. Their cultures of blood, CSF and urine for bacterial pathogens yielded no growth and they were unresponsive to conventional antibiotics. The diagnosis of malaria should be considered, in spite of regular maternal ingestion of antimalarial prophylaxis with pyrimethamine, in critically ill neonates in malarious areas. All six neonates responded satisfactorily to oral doses of chloroquine. We therefore suggest that a blood film for malaria parasites be included in screening for neonatal sepsis as part of the initial work-up.
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PMID:Malaria parasitaemia in neonates with predisposing risk factors for neonatal sepsis: report of six cases. 128 46

Neonatal hematopoiesis and host defense are developmentally immature and under states of increased demand predispose the newborn to peripheral cytopenias and depletion of bone marrow storage pool reserves. We have previously demonstrated that recombinant human granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (rhG-CSF) can significantly modulate neonatal rat granulopoiesis and act synergistically with antibiotic therapy to reduce the mortality rate during experimental group B streptococcal sepsis. Stem cell factor (SCF) has been shown to stimulate early hematopoietic progenitor cells and, in the presence of lineage-specific CSFs, enhance committed progenitor cell proliferation. In the present study we examined the in vivo neonatal hematologic effects of recombinant rat (rr) SCF (14 days), simultaneous rrSCF + rhG-CSF (14 days), and sequential combination of rrSCF (7 days) + rhG-CSF (7 days). Sprague-Dawley newborn rats (less than or equal to 24 hours) were injected intraperitoneal (IP) x 14 days with the above combinations. rrSCF (0 to 200 micrograms/kg/d) had a negligible effect on the peripheral platelet count and absolute neutrophil count (ANC) but the diminution in the hematocrit during the first 10 days of treatment was less pronounced (P = .0001). However, the simultaneous use of rrSCF + rhG-CSF synergistically increased the circulating day 6 to 13 ANC (P = .001). Similarly, sequential rrSCF + rhG-SCF also had a synergistic significant effect during the second week of therapy on the circulating ANC (P = .01). The bone marrow neutrophil storage and proliferative pools were also significantly increased in newborn rats treated with rrSCF + rhG-CSF versus rhG-CSF (P = .02). The bone marrow and liver/spleen CFU-GM pool was unchanged; however, the CFU-GM proliferative rates were significantly increased in the rrSCF + rhG-CSF group (P = .04). rrSCF also induced a significant increase in the bone marrow and liver/spleen mast cell pool (P = .002). Lastly, rrSCF x 14 days +/- rhG-CSF significantly reduced the mortality rate at 48 and 120 hours after experimental group B streptococcus sepsis (P = .03 and .05, respectively). These data suggest that combination SCF + G-CSF therapy compared with G-CSF alone significantly increases the neonatal rat peripheral neutrophil count, bone marrow myeloid pools and proliferative rates, and induces a reduction in the mortality rate during experimental bacterial sepsis. SCF therapy may have future potential applications in the modulation of human neonatal hematopoiesis and host defense.
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PMID:Effect of stem cell factor with and without granulocyte colony-stimulating factor on neonatal hematopoiesis: in vivo induction of newborn myelopoiesis and reduction of mortality during experimental group B streptococcal sepsis. 137 57

Pretreatment with recombinant human granulocyte CSF (G-CSF) protected mice in two different models of septic shock. Intravenous injection of 250 micrograms/kg G-CSF to mice prevented lethality induced by 5 mg/kg LPS. Injection of 50 micrograms/kg G-CSF protected galactosamine-sensitized mice against LPS-induced hepatitis. In either case, this protection was accompanied by a suppression of LPS-induced serum TNF activity. In contrast, when galactosamine-sensitized mice were pretreated with 50 micrograms/kg murine recombinant granulocyte/macrophage CSF instead of G-CSF and subsequently challenged with LPS, serum TNF activity was significantly enhanced and mortality was increased. The suppressive effect of G-CSF on LPS-induced TNF production was also demonstrated in rats. In vivo, no TNF was detectable in the blood of LPS-treated rats, which had been pretreated with G-CSF. Ex vivo, alveolar macrophages, bone marrow macrophages, Kupffer cells, or peritoneal macrophages prepared from G-CSF-treated rats produced significantly less TNF upon stimulation with LPS than corresponding populations from control rats. However, when these macrophage populations were incubated with G-CSF in vitro, LPS-induced TNF production was unaffected. These data suggest that the G-CSF-mediated suppression of TNF production is not a direct effect of G-CSF on macrophages. To examine whether, independent of the protection against LPS, G-CSF treatment still activated neutrophils, it was demonstrated that granulocytes from G-CSF-treated rats were primed for PMA-induced oxidative burst and for ionophore/arachidonic acid-stimulated lipoxygenase product formation. The experiments of this study support the notion that G-CSF is a negative feedback signal for macrophage-derived TNF-alpha production during Gram-negative sepsis.
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PMID:Granulocyte colony-stimulating factor treatment protects rodents against lipopolysaccharide-induced toxicity via suppression of systemic tumor necrosis factor-alpha. 137 68

Newborns are predisposed to neutropenia and thrombocytopenia during bacterial sepsis. The presence of peripheral cytopenias during overwhelming infection may be secondary to decreased hematopoietic growth factor production during states of increased demand. We therefore examined circulating levels of granulocyte-colony stimulating factor (G-CSF) and IL-3, production of G-CSF and IL-3 from unstimulated and stimulated mononuclear cells (MNC), expression of G-CSF and IL-3 genes during unstimulated and stimulated conditions, and equilibrium and binding of G-CSF receptors on mature effector peripheral blood cells of adults and neonates. Serum from cord and adult peripheral blood contained negligible amounts of both G-CSF (less than or equal to 50 pg/mL) and IL-3 (less than or equal to 5 pg/mL). Constitutive supernatant levels of G-CSF and IL-3 from cord and adult unstimulated MNC were also undetectable. However, there was a significant difference in G-CSF and IL-3 production from stimulated cord and adult MNC. Supernatants from stimulated adult MNC had significantly more G-CSF (p less than 0.007) and IL-3 (p less than 0.02). Additionally, Northern blot hybridization and densitometry of autoradiographs demonstrated significantly more G-CSF and IL-3 mRNA transcripts from adult than from cord MNC. Lastly, affinity, binding, and number of G-CSF receptors on cord and adult peripheral effector cells were equal. These data suggest that, during states of increased demand, cord MNC produce less G-CSF and IL-3 than do adult MNC and have an associated reduction in their respective mRNA transcripts. These findings may have implications in the pathogenesis of neonatal cytopenias during states of increased demand, such as sepsis.
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PMID:Decreased G-CSF and IL-3 production and gene expression from mononuclear cells of newborn infants. 137 59

A previously healthy breast-fed baby was admitted at 10 days of age to a hospital in the north of Pakistan with diarrhoea and fever. He was treated for suspected sepsis with intravenous cefotaxime and tobramycin. Cultures of blood and faeces at that time proved negative. At 12 days of age, seizures began and examination of CSF revealed evidence of pyogenic meningitis but bacteria were neither seen microscopically nor isolated in culture. Ceftazidime was substituted for cefotaxime and carbenicillin was given also. Since the baby's condition continued to deteriorate with persistent fever, vomiting and recurrent seizures, he was transferred to the Aga Khan University Hospital, Karachi. Examination of CSF there confirmed the diagnosis of pyogenic meningitis and revealed Gram-negative bacteria. Cultures of CSF and faeces yielded Salmonella paratyphi A but the blood culture was negative. The isolate was found to be multiple antimicrobially resistant but sensitive to ciprofloxacin. Treatment with this drug was therefore started 3 days after the baby's admission to the Aga Khan Hospital. Within 36 h, improvement was observed. From then onwards, the baby made a progressive recovery and was healthy when seen at 7 months of age.
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PMID:Eradication of a multiple drug resistant Salmonella paratyphi A causing meningitis with ciprofloxacin. 143 Nov 77

Hypereosinophilia has been detected in the CSF of 22 patients in a series of 81 cases of shunt infection. It was related with the evolution of the sepsis. Its persistence at the end of treatment appeared to predict later complications, septic or obstructive, and it could be the sign of latent infection. HE might be the result of a specific reaction directed against the infected material, but a non-specific process cannot be eliminated.
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PMID:Cerebro-spinal fluid eosinophilia in shunt infections. 145 41

Two cases of atypical Kawasaki disease are reported. Case 1 was a five-month-old male infant admitted to this hospital with a 10-day's history of high fever. On examination, he appeared ill-looking and only hepatomegaly was noted. Laboratory studies showed leukocytosis, thrombocytosis, elevated ESR and pleocytosis in CSF. He was treated as sepsis with meningitis. Sudden death occurred on the eighth day of admission, and left coronary artery aneurysm with thrombosis was noted at autopsy. Case 2 was a four-month-old male infant referred to our hospital with fever and cervical lymphadenopathy of 11 day's duration, and unresponsive to antibiotics. Skin rash had developed after oxacillin injection. Echocardiogram, performed on the third day of admission, disclosed a 5-8 mm aneurysm of the left coronary artery and a 4 mm aneurysm of the right coronary artery. Before a specific diagnostic test for Kawasaki disease becomes available, we suggest that a possible diagnosis of Kawasaki disease and echocardiographic evaluation should be considered in case of (1) presence of partial criteria of Kawasaki disease with thrombocytosis; and/or (2) young infants with prolonged unexplained fever.
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PMID:Atypical Kawasaki disease: report of two cases. 151 14

The use of recombinant human granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (rhGM-CSF) as therapy in neonatal sepsis has been proposed because of observed defects in polymorphonuclear leukocyte (PMNL) production and function in infected neonates. Newborn rats were infected intraperitoneally (ip) with type III group B streptococcus (III-GBS) and effects of treatment with rhGM-CSF given ip 7-19 h after infection were studied. Overall mortality was 67% in controls and 37% in animals treated with rhGM-CSF (P = .003). No changes in peripheral blood PMNL number or oxidative metabolic function were found in infected or uninfected animals given rhGM-CSF compared with controls. In uninfected animals, there was an increase in the oxidative burst of peritoneal cells at 3.5 h (P = .043) and in the numbers of peritoneal cells at 3 h (P = .001) in animals receiving ip rhGM-CSF compared with controls. Phagocyte priming, cellular influx into the peritoneum, or both appear to contribute to the decreased mortality observed in this model of rhGM-CSF therapy of III-GBS disease in neonates.
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PMID:Therapeutic use of recombinant human granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor in neonatal rats with type III group B streptococcal sepsis. 153 38

One hundred seventy-seven cases of neonatal meningitis treated at the University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston over a 15-year period (1974-1988) were reviewed. Over this period, the incidence of bacterial meningitis decreased, the incidence of aseptic meningitis remained stable, and the diagnosis of enteroviral meningitis increased in frequency. During 1984-1988, enterovirus was the most common cause of meningitis in neonates older than seven days and accounted for one third of all cases of neonatal meningitis. Half of all neonates with bacterial meningitis had negative blood cultures. We recommend that 1) diagnostic lumbar puncture remain part of the routine assessment of the neonate with suspected sepsis, and 2) CSF be cultured for enterovirus as well as for bacteria when a neonate older than seven days presents with suspected sepsis.
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PMID:The changing spectrum of neonatal meningitis over a fifteen-year period. 154 83


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