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

Systemic sepsis and pneumonia are common predisposing factors for ARDS, which can serve as the initial manifestation of the multisystem organ failure syndrome. Primary pneumonia that necessitates ICU admission leads to ARDS in approximately 10% of patients. Systemic infection can also lead to ARDS, but when bacteremia alone is present, the risk is low (probably less than 5%). If the septic syndrome with a hemodynamic and end-organ response develops, the ARDS may follow in as many as 40% of patients. When multiple risk factors for acute lung injury are present, the risk of developing ARDS rises dramatically. The septic syndrome, acute lung injury, and multiorgan failure are closely tied to one another because bacterial cell walls can activate inflammatory mediators, such as interleukin-1 and tumor necrosis factor, which can in turn lead to the septic syndrome and inflammatory injury to the lung. Clinical features, more than serum markers, have been the best predictors of whether lung injury will follow sepsis, indicating that the mere presence of mediators alone cannot cause ARDS and that there are individual susceptibility factors in the effects of these mediators. With the advent of monoclonal antibodies and new anti-inflammatory drugs, prevention of progression from sepsis to multiorgan failure may become possible. Pneumonia is the most common infection that complicates ARDS once it is established, and the mortality rate may approach 90%. The existence of acute lung injury, its predisposing conditions, coexisting illnesses, and the therapeutic interventions used for patients with lung injury all can interfere with lung host defenses and set the stage for bacterial infection of the already-injured lung. This infection appears to add to the propagation of the multiple system organ failure that has already begun. In the future, it may become possible to prevent this infection, which would be a welcome development, because currently, we are stymied in our efforts to diagnose and treat pneumonia in the setting of acute lung injury. Preventive efforts will follow from an understanding of the pathogenesis of pneumonia and in the future may include topical antibiotics, selective digestive decontamination, and prophylactic passive immunotherapy.
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PMID:Sepsis syndrome, the adult respiratory distress syndrome, and nosocomial pneumonia. A common clinical sequence. 226 94

We have determined the plasma concentrations of types 1 and 2 of plasminogen activator inhibitor (PAI-1 and PAI-2), tumor necrosis factor (TNF-alpha) and endotoxin in 47 patients with bacterial infection (22 patients presented with positive blood cultures). Results were compared with those observed in 30 healthy subjects. There was a significant increase in PAI-1 and TNF-alpha in patients as compared to controls (p less than 0.0001), whereas no differences for PAI-2 were observed. PAI-1 and TNF-alpha were significantly higher in 18 patients with gram-negative bacteremia as compared to all other patients (p less than 0.0001). However, no correlation between the analyzed parameters and either endotoxin or clinical outcome was observed. We conclude that there is an increase of PAI-1 and TNF-alpha in patients with sepsis, which is not related to the endotoxin concentration. Our results suggest that PAI-1, but not PAI-2, is the main plasminogen activator inhibitor in human sepsis.
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PMID:Types 1 and 2 plasminogen activator inhibitor and tumor necrosis factor alpha in patients with sepsis. 227 26

Several lines of evidence implicate tumor necrosis factor (TNF), a cytokine produced by monocytes-macrophages, in the systemic manifestations of shock induced by Gram-negative bacteria. Whether the increase of circulating TNF levels is specific to septic shock as compared to sepsis without shock or to non-septic shock is still unclear. Since TNF values recorded at the time of admission to the hospital vary widely, statistical analysis has not been possible. Therefore, we postulated that the evolution of a patient's TNF serum level as compared to his initial value may better distinguish the survivor from the non-survivor than a single initial determination. Using a radioimmunoassay, we measured the TNF concentrations in the sera of 7 patients with severe infections without shock, 16 patients with septic shock and 8 patients with non-septic shock. Blood samples were drawn within the first 12 hours after the onset of shock. Patients with cancer, HIV infection, or under steroid therapy were excluded. Repeated measurements were made during the first 3 days of septic shock in 10 patients. The circulating TNF level, determined upon admission, appears to be neither specific nor predictive of the outcome of septic shock. In contrast, persistently high levels of circulating TNF seem to be well correlated with a poor prognosis, since 5 out of 6 patients with elevated TNF values died of septic shock.
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PMID:[Specificity and serum concentrations of tumor necrosis factor in septic shock]. 228 4

A unique case report with sequential measurements of the plasma concentrations of glucoregulatory hormones, interleukin-6 and tumor necrosis factor during development of hypoglycemia in fatal meningococcemia is presented. Hormonal explanations for hypoglycemia like hyperinsulinemia or defective hypoglycemic counter-regulation were excluded. Plasma concentrations of interleukin-6 and tumor necrosis factor were skyhigh. The putative relation between cytokines and hypoglycemia in sepsis is discussed.
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PMID:Hypoglycemia, hormones and cytokines in fatal meningococcal septicemia. 229 58

Serum cachectin/tumor necrosis factor (TNF), a cytokine implicated in the pathogenesis of septic shock, may appear in the circulation during serious infection, but the frequency of detection of elevated serum levels during protracted critical burn injury is unknown. Serial serum samples taken from 43 critically ill patients with burns with and without sepsis were analyzed for TNF using an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). TNF was detectable (greater than 34 picograms per milliliter) at one or more time points in 69 per cent of the patients with sepsis versus 33 per cent of those without sepsis, in 71 per cent of the patients who died versus only 31 per cent of the survivors and in only one healthy normal control patient (n = 21). The frequency of the appearance of TNF correlated with both infection and mortality rate. Moreover, all three patients with TNF levels greater than 540 picograms per milliliter died. Neither the size of the burn nor injury from inhalation correlated with detection of TNF. A subset of 16 patients was studied longitudinally from admission until resolution of injury and these data demonstrate that TNF appears transiently and repetitively in the circulation of patients during infection and protracted critical burn injury. Also, serum cortisol levels were significantly higher during sepsis and death in the absence of serum TNF, compared with sepsis and death with detectable cachectin, suggesting that cortisol may interact with the production or detection of this cytokine during ongoing infection and lethal injury. In this study, we have demonstrated that serum TNF is detectable with greater frequency and in higher concentration in patients with sepsis and in those who ultimately succumb to the burn injury, that serum TNF appears transiently and repetitively in the circulation during injury and that higher serum cortisol levels are correlated with the absence of serum TNF during sepsis and lethal injury.
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PMID:Serum cachectin/tumor necrosis factor in critically ill patients with burns correlates with infection and mortality. 229 27

Secretion of tumor necrosis factor (TNF)/cachectin occurs during gram-negative bacterial sepsis in response to macrophage stimulation by lipopolysaccharide (endotoxin) and may play an early pivotal role in the subsequent host response. We sought to determine whether administration of: (1) murine monoclonal antibody directed against endotoxin, (2) steroids, or (3) antimicrobial agents would abrogate TNF production and whether the protective capacity would correlate with TNF levels in an experimental model of murine gram-negative bacterial sepsis. Mice were pretreated with anti-lipopolysaccharide monoclonal antibody, gentamicin sulfate, hydrocortisone, or saline and were then challenged with a lethal dose of intraperitoneal Salmonella minnesota. Murine serum TNF levels were measured by the L929 fibroblast cytotoxicity assay. Both gentamicin and anti-lipopolysaccharide monoclonal antibody significantly enhanced survival, and TNF activity at 1.5 and 3 hours was significantly suppressed in animals receiving these agents compared with animals that received either steroids or saline. We conclude that agents such as gentamicin, which inhibits bacterial replication, or monoclonal antibodies, which may neutralize lipopolysaccharide, indeed enhance survival, and survival was correlated with a significant reduction in circulating TNF during the early stages of infection.
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PMID:Decreased tumor necrosis factor production during the initial stages of infection correlates with survival during murine gram-negative sepsis. 229 80

We assayed serial plasma samples from 86 patients, who were enrolled in a prospective randomized trial of the effects of methylprednisolone (MPSS) in septic shock, for the presence of cytokine tumor necrosis factor (TNF) using an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. TNF was present in the plasma of 27 of the 74 patients with septic shock, but in only 1 of the 12 patients with shock due to other causes. TNF was detected with equal frequency in patients with shock from gram-negative or from gram-positive bacillary sepsis. TNF levels were highest on the initial sample and decreased significantly over the subsequent 24 h in both the patients treated with MPSS and in those given placebo. Patients with detectable TNF had a higher incidence and severity of the adult respiratory distress syndrome and a higher mortality rate than did patients without detectable TNF.
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PMID:Plasma tumor necrosis factor in patients with septic shock. Mortality rate, incidence of adult respiratory distress syndrome, and effects of methylprednisolone administration. 229 91

Fibrin formation plays an important role in glomerular injury. We therefore examined the procoagulant signal produced by cultured rat mesangial cells. Actively growing mesangial cells produced procoagulant activity (PCA) that was present in intact cells (surface-associated), was inhibitable by cyclohexamide and which, by clotting assay, had the characteristics of tissue factor. This PCA decreased with incubation of cells in serum-deprived medium. Incubation with bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS) and tumor necrosis factor (TNF alpha) induced increased detectable tissue factor by mesangial cells within two hours which was maximal by four hours. We conclude that quiescent mesangial cells produce a small amount of tissue factor-like procoagulant activity, and that this PCA can be stimulated by incubation with TNF alpha, LPS or when cells are actively growing in high serum medium. Therefore mesangial cells have the capability of contributing to fibrin formation during inflammatory glomerular injury or sepsis.
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PMID:Tissue factor production by cultured rat mesangial cells. Stimulation by TNF alpha and lipopolysaccharide. 234 26

The endogenously produced cytokine, tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha), has been shown in adult animal models to be associated with many of the pathophysiologic effects of sepsis, including systemic hypotension and hemorrhagic necrosis. TNF-alpha can induce the release of various vasoactive arachidonic acid metabolites, suggesting that TNF-alpha may act either directly or via intermediary substances in producing its effects. The pathophysiologic role of TNF-alpha in neonatal sepsis, especially its potential effect on pulmonary vascular tone, is presently unknown. To assess the role of TNF-alpha in neonatal sepsis, 19 piglets (19 +/- 5 d old) were anesthetized, intubated, paralyzed, mechanically ventilated, and catheterized to assess pulmonary and systemic vascular hemodynamics and pulmonary gas exchange. The multiple inert gas elimination technique was used to assess ventilation perfusion matching. A 30-min infusion of human recombinant TNF-alpha (250 micrograms/kg total dose) was administered to animals pretreated with either 10 mg/kg dazmegrel, a thromboxane synthase inhibitor (n = 9) or placebo (n = 10). TNF-alpha alone induced a prompt and sustained rise in pulmonary arterial pressure and pulmonary vascular resistance that continued at least for 2 h after onset of the infusion. In contrast, the animals pretreated with dazmegrel demonstrated no rise in pulmonary vascular resistance until 2 h after the onset of the infusion. Neither group of animals demonstrated a significant decline in arterial PO2 or evidence from inert gas analysis of VA/Q mismatching or increase in intrapulmonary shunt.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Tumor necrosis factor-induced neonatal pulmonary hypertension: effects of dazmegrel pretreatment. 234 73

The role of tumor necrosis factor (TNF-alpha) in the pathogenesis of septic shock has been assessed by daily measurements of serum TNF-alpha levels in 60 patients admitted to the medical intensive care unit. All patients in the study had infectious disease and were at risk for the development of sepsis and septic shock. Sepsis was diagnosed in 34 patients, 24 of whom died (six within the first 24 hours). The 26 patients who did not evolve toward sepsis served as a control group. The clinical condition of all patients was monitored by daily APACHE II scoring. Blood was drawn once a day and additional samples were taken in patients whose clinical condition underwent sudden deterioration. TNF-alpha levels were measured with a commercially available immunoradiometric assay. At time of patient admission, TNF-alpha levels were higher in the group with sepsis than in the control group (median 79 iqr 329 vs median 0.5 iqr 5; p less than 0.001). In the group with sepsis, extremely high TNF-alpha levels were found in patients who died within 24 hours. These patients had TNF-alpha levels of 917 iqr 755 pg/ml, whereas the patients who died more than 24 hours after admission had TNF-alpha levels of 58 iqr 59 pg/ml. Survivors had lower TNF-alpha levels (26 iqr 347 pg/ml). APACHE II scores correlated with TNF-alpha levels in the total sepsis group (Spearman rank correlation coefficient 0.477; p less than 0.005).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Serum tumor necrosis factor levels in patients with infectious disease and septic shock. 237 91


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