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

Sepsis and extensive burn injury produce clinical syndromes characterized in part by "insulin resistance," but it is unclear if these insulin resistant states are identical. To test if the maximal biological effectiveness of insulin is altered in septic or burned patients, eight septic patients and eight nonseptic patients recovering from severe burn injury were studied using the hyperinsulinemic eukalemic euglycemic clamp technique. Compared with bed-rested controls, the septic patients showed an insulin-induced plasma clearance of potassium, which was 183% higher (P less than .001), and a concomitant glucose clearance, which was 52% lower (P less than .001). Nonseptic burn patients also had a 91% increase in potassium clearance (P less than .05), but their maximal insulin-stimulated glucose uptake was not different from that of bedrested controls. When septic patients were compared with their nonseptic burned counterparts, there was no difference in potassium clearance in response to insulin, but glucose uptake by the septic patients was 47% lower (P less than .001). Insulin infusion completely suppressed hepatic glucose production in both septic patients and in nonseptic burn patients. The percent of whole body glucose uptake that was oxidized was not different between the septic patients and the nonseptic postburn patients in both the basal and insulin-stimulated states (38% and 51% v 38% and 42%, respectively). It is concluded that septic and postburn insulin resistance differ in that peripheral glucose uptake in sepsis, but not nonseptic burn injury, is refractory to pharmacologic insulin stimulation, whereas in both states insulin effectively stimulates potassium uptake.
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PMID:Differentiation between septic and postburn insulin resistance. 267 12

Circulating factors produced by the macrophages mediate skeletal muscle proteolysis in sepsis and trauma. This study was done to determine whether cytokines affect skeletal muscle metabolism in cancer. Using a method initially developed to measure proteolytic factors in sepsis and trauma, plasma from cachectic cancer patients, noncachectic cancer patients, and normal controls was tested for effects on normal rat skeletal muscle (soleus, extensor digitorum longus). The experimental design allows concomitant measurement of protein synthesis, by [14C]phenylalanine uptake, and protein degradation, by tyrosine release. Plasma from cancer patients caused no acceleration of protein degradation. Noncachectic cancer plasma acted synergistically with insulin to increase protein synthesis (P less than 0.05). These results indicate that a growth factor is present in the plasma of cancer patients who have not become cachexic. To our knowledge, this is the first documentation of a cancer plasma growth factor acting at the organ level to induce synthesis. Our data refute the theory that cancer cachexia is mediated by circulating proteolytic factors. In a separate experiment, purified human recombinant tumor necrosis factor (rTNF) was incubated with normal rat skeletal muscle. No changes were seen in synthesis or degradation rates. Skeletal muscle proteolysis does not appear to be directly induced by rTNF.
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PMID:Effect of cancer plasma on skeletal muscle metabolism. 268 6

The authors describe a term female, asphyxiated, small for gestational age (SGA) infant with documented hyperinsulinism and hypoglycemia occurring at approximately 45 hours of age. The hypoglycemia was refractory to a high rate glucose infusion and steroid administration but responded to diazoxide. The subsequent hospital course was complicated by right-sided heart failure and sepsis. With the onset of sepsis, a transient hyperglycemia was noted that required intermittent insulin therapy for 10 days. Hypoglycemia and hyperinsulinism reemerged and responded to diazoxide therapy. An attempt to discontinue diazoxide at age 6 months was aborted at 2 weeks when hyperinsulinism and hypoglycemia recurred. The infant required diazoxide for 7 more months, then she recovered without having any sequelae. The review of this uncommon hypoglycemia etiology in an SGA and asphyxiated infant and the merits of long-term diazoxide treatment are discussed.
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PMID:Prolonged hyperinsulinism and hypoglycemia. In an asphyxiated, small for gestation infant. Case management and literature review. 268 73

We reported a case of halothane-induced fulminant hepatitis with acute renal failure which developed 6 days after reexposure to halothane. The patient was a 58-year-old female. She had a history of liver dysfunction after exposure to halothane 6 years previously. She had surgical treatment of clubfoot under halothane anesthesia in other hospital. Preoperative physical examination and laboratory data were normal. On the 6th post-operative day she abruptly developed high fever and general fatigue. Next day, she was transferred to our hospital. At admission, fulminant hepatitis complicated with acute renal failure was diagnosed with severe liver and renal damage. She was immediately treated with plasma exchange, glucose-insulin therapy, and hemodialysis. Serum transaminase level returned to normal value within a week. However, despite repeated hemodialysis, renal function did not improve, and she died of P. aeruginosa sepsis on 28th day after the operation. It may be suggested that in this patient hypersensitivity to halothane has persisted during the six years.
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PMID:[A case of fulminant hepatitis after reexposure to halothane six years later]. 281 Jul 19

Because of its wide distribution in the organism, natural somatostatin (SRIF) demonstrates an ample spectrum of actions, involving mainly the central neuroendocrine system and the enteropancreatic area. In the former, this peptide may find its field of application in conditions characterized by excessive GH, TSH or ACTH secretion, depending on the central or peripheral cause of the inappropriate hormone control. The inhibitory effect of SRIF on gastrointestinal and pancreatic hormones may be useful in the management of tumors originating in this system and also in the treatment of inflammatory processes such as pancreatitis, in malignant diarrhea, and in gastrointestinal bleeding. A complex action of SRIF and its derivative on insulin release and glucose homeostasis may offer some advantages in the control of unstable diabetes. Dampening of organic functions in the upper digestive tract may also render SRIF and its analogues useful in the exploration of the gallbladder, gastric and pancreatic functions. The effect of such peptides on tissue growth and on the regulation of blood pressure are the subject of present investigations. Cytoprotection, an interesting aspect of SRIF application, is discussed elsewhere in this compendium. Finally, some comments on the possible use of SRIF as an additive to the conventional treatment of burns and sepsis close this review.
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PMID:Clinical applications of somatostatin. 290 Feb 4

The present study examined the purported exacerbating effect of sepsis on glucose metabolism in diabetes. Diabetes was induced in rats by an intravenous injection of 70 or 45 mg/kg streptozotocin. The higher dose produced "severe" diabetes, whereas the lower dose of streptozotocin produced a milder, "latent" diabetes. After a chronic diabetic state had developed for 4 wk, rats had catheters implanted and sepsis induced by intraperitoneal injections of live Escherichia coli. After 24 h of sepsis the blood glucose concentration was unchanged in nondiabetics and latent diabetics, but glucose decreased from 15 to 8 mM in the septic severe diabetic group. This decrease in blood glucose was not accompanied by alterations in the plasma insulin concentration. Glucose turnover, assessed by the constant intravenous infusion of [6-3H]- and [U-14C]glucose, was elevated in the severe diabetic group, compared with either latent diabetics or nondiabetics. Induction of sepsis produced a slight decrease in the glucose turnover in the severe diabetic group but did not alter turnover in the latent diabetics. The rate of glucose disappearance, used to quantitate the alterations in plasma glucose after an intravenous glucose tolerance test, was decreased in both groups of diabetics and was proportional to the severity of the diabetic state. Sepsis increased the rate of glucose disappearance in nondiabetic rats but had no effect in either group of diabetic animals. Sepsis also failed to alter the insulinogenic index, used to estimate the insulin secretory capacity, in diabetic rats.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Altered glucose kinetics in diabetic rats during gram-negative infection. 295 88

One hundred nineteen patients were entered onto a randomized trial of the role of intravenous hyperalimentation (IVH) in patients with small-cell lung cancer. IVH was given during the first 30 days of induction chemotherapy to 54 patients. IVH did not effect any improvement in response or survival from therapy. In view of the lack of benefits from IVH, an analysis was made of the toxicities suffered by the 54 patients receiving IVH as well as any effects IVH might have made on chemotherapy-induced toxicity. Toxicities observed included mechanical difficulties with the catheter leading to temporary or permanent discontinuation of the IVH (11 patients), subclavian vein thrombosis (one patient), sepsis in nine patients v none of the 62 control patients, fluid overload (27 patients), hyponatremia (25 patients), and hyperglycemia requiring insulin (13 patients). Patients receiving IVH had higher granulocyte counts on days 14 and 21 of the first cycle of chemotherapy. Analysis shows that this difference is likely caused by fever and infection associated with IVH rather than any nutritional effect on granulopoiesis. In this population of patients, IVH had significant complications but did not ameliorate chemotherapy-induced toxicity and it did not effect any clinical benefit. Future studies of adjunctive nutritional therapy must consider the significant risk in this older population and must limit IVH volume or exclude patients with even mild compromise in cardiovascular functions. Further, any new trial must have a significant rationale for adjunctive use to justify the potential risks.
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PMID:Effects of intravenous hyperalimentation during treatment in patients with small-cell lung cancer. 299 75

Suppression of an adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) response to insulin hypoglycemia has been reported in ACTH-treated adults. There are no guidelines for withdrawal of ACTH treatment in children. After observing suppressed morning cortisol in several children, insulin tolerance tests were performed in five children within 48 hours after tapered withdrawal of ACTH treatment for myoclonic seizures. ACTH response, as determined by cortisol and beta-endorphin radioimmunoassay, was adequate in four of the children. One child showed low basal levels and minimal elevation during hypoglycemia for both beta-endorphin (0 to 3 pg/ml) and cortisol (3.6 to 4.4 micrograms/dL) on initial testing, but normal responses six weeks later. Measurement of beta-endorphin response supported a central basis for suppression in the child, who had had an adrenal hemorrhage during gram-negative sepsis while on ACTH. ACTH release is transiently suppressed in some children after exogenous ACTH treatment. Tapered withdrawal and stress coverage is recommended.
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PMID:Suppressed pituitary ACTH response after ACTH treatment of infantile spasms. 303 33

A prospective, randomized trial was undertaken to compare the nutritional efficacy in surgical stress of a standard amino acid solution and two branched chain-enriched amino acid solutions: one enriched primarily with valine, the other with leucine. The study comprised 37 patients in the surgical intensive care unit who received isocaloric, isonitrogenous parenteral nutrition started within 24 hours of the onset of major operation, injury, or sepsis. Nitrogen retention was marginally but statistically significantly better on days 5, 7, and 10 in both groups of patients receiving the branched chain-enriched solutions, but differences in cumulative nitrogen balance were not statistically significant. Amino acid composition appeared to be important in that the group receiving the leucine-enriched solution appeared to maintain hepatic protein synthesis better (as manifest by higher short-turnover plasma protein concentrations) and required less exogenous insulin to maintain euglycemia. Improved outcome was not seen in the groups receiving the branched chain-enriched solutions.
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PMID:Branched chain amino acid-enriched solutions in the septic patient. A randomized, prospective trial. 307 94

The treatment of acute pancreatitis is primary conservative independent of the degree of severeness. The aim of our multimodal concept of therapy (stomach tube, catheterisation of urinary bladder, closed peritoneal dialysis, analgetics--peridural catheter-, substitution of volume-electrolytes, colloides, protein, plasma, blood-, antibiotics, heparin H2-receptor blocker, early artificial respiration, insulin, parenteral nutrition-glucose, amino acids, fat-, hemofiltration/-dialysis, percutaneous drainage of liquid formations) is to postpone or to avoid an operation. Only the erosion bleeding or a locally conditioned sepsis ask for an emergency operation. The lethality of the degrees II (n = 30) and III (n = 39) could be decreased to 20.3% in the last 7 years. The follow-up of 55 patients with severe pancreatitis was free of clinical symptoms in 80% with normal exocrine and endocrine function of pancreas. This confirms that the organ itself is mostly intact even in severe cases of pancreatitis, in hemorrhagic-necrotic pancreatitis.
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PMID:[Pancreatitis: conservative therapy]. 310 Aug 87


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