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Query: UMLS:C0243026 (
sepsis
)
52,417
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The purpose of this study was to determine the effect of preoperative renal failure on the outcome of patients undergoing infrarenal abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) repair. Of 251 patients undergoing AAA repair from 1977 to 1984, 10% had evidence of preoperative
chronic renal failure
. These patients were classified according to their preoperative serum creatinine values; group I had preoperative creatinine levels of 2 to 4 mg/dl, group II had creatinine levels greater than 4 mg/dl but no history of hemodialysis, and group III consisted of patients on chronic hemodialysis before operation. One of 16 patients in group I developed transient high-output renal failure postoperatively. Four of the six patients in group II (67%) developed significant postoperative deterioration of renal function and required acute hemodialysis. Of the four patients in group III maintained on chronic hemodialysis preoperatively, one died of
sepsis
from an ischemic colon. This experience suggests that patients with mild renal dysfunction (serum creatine value less than 4 mg/dl) can undergo elective AAA repair without additional morbidity. Patients on hemodialysis before operation can also safely undergo surgical repair of their AAAs electively if dialyzed the day before operation. Patients with severe renal dysfunction (serum creatinine greater than 4 mg/dl) who are not on hemodialysis should be considered for dialysis preoperatively in an attempt to reduce the high incidence of serious postoperative renal functional deterioration and subsequent morbidity.
...
PMID:Abdominal aortic aneurysm repair in patients with preoperative renal failure. 371 33
Over a 6 years period, 51 autopsies have been performed in infants dead after severe
sepsis
. One third of them had renal damages, consisting mainly in haemorrhagic infiltration. Pathological and clinical data are not always well correlated, but some parameters may enhance a poorer renal prognosis, such as the duration of shock and anuria, or exchange transfusion. The clinical presentation of the infection and the encountered germs are the same in both groups, with or without renal damage. A better management of intensive haemodynamic cares in these neonates increases their survival rate and raises the problem of
chronic renal failure
or hypertension in this situation. It seems very useful to state precisely the surveillance and protection of the renal function in such patients.
...
PMID:[Anatomical study of the kidneys of newborn infants dying after a septic state]. 372 9
Classification of platelet disorders has been based on the platelet count. Addition of a second variable, mean platelet volume (MPV), to the routine blood count allows classification of patients into 9 categories: high, low, or normal MPV, and high, low or normal platelet count. We studied 1,244 adult inpatients. 1,134 had both platelet values normal. 11 patients had high MPV and low platelet count: all had hyperdestructive causes. 15 patients had high MPV and normal platelet count: 12 had heterozygous thalassemia, and three had iron deficiency. Seven patients had high MPV and high platelet count: causes included myeloproliferative disorders, inflammation, iron deficiency, and splenectomy, 25 patients had high platelet counts and normal MPV: the causes were inflammation, infection, sickle cell anemia, iron deficiency, or chronic myelogenous leukemia. 52 patients had an MPV that was inappropriately low for the platelet count (high, normal, or low). All had
sepsis
, splenomegaly, aplastic anemia,
chronic renal failure
, or a disease being treated with myelosuppressive drugs. High MPV thus appears correlated with myeloproliferative disease or thalassemia; and low MPV, with cytotoxic drugs or marrow hypoplasia. Addition of MPV to the platelet count allows subtler disorders to be detected (when the platelet count is normal), and allows distinction of the cause of thrombocytopenia.
...
PMID:Use of mean platelet volume improves detection of platelet disorders. 407 87
60 Jamaican children with homozygous sickle cell (SS) disease underwent splenectomy, 14 for prophylaxis against recurrent acute splenic sequestration and 46 for treatment of sustained hypersplenism. Age at operation varied from 9 months to 16 years. Patients were followed up for 1 month to 27 years (median 6 years), with a total of 369 years of patient-observation. None of the 3 patients who died, at ages 2 1/2, 6 1/2, and 21 years, had received prophylaxis against infection. Overwhelming
sepsis
was possible but not confirmed in the first two deaths which occurred 11 months and 2 1/2 years after operation; the third died from
chronic renal failure
11 years after splenectomy. After operation, there were no confirmed cases of pneumococcal septicaemia or meningitis, and the commonest clinical event was the acute chest syndrome.
...
PMID:Role of splenectomy in homozygous sickle cell disease in childhood. 614 Apr 33
Forty-two patients with advanced testis carcinoma without previous chemotherapy were treated with VAB-4, and 41 were evaluable. The program consisted of three in-hospital inductions 16 weeks apart, and outpatient treatments every three weeks. Of the patients, 80% achieved complete remissions (CR). Chemotherapy alone induced CR in 61%, partial remissions (PR), in 24% and minor response (MR), in 15%. An additional 20% of patients (six PRs and 2 MRs) achieved CR following resection of residual tumor deposits. With a median follow-up of 27 months, the median duration of CR has not been reached. Of those achieving CR to chemotherapy alone, 12% had relapses. Bulk and extent of metastatic disease, histology of primary tumor, and tumor markers at the beginning of therapy influenced the frequency of CR. Of those with minimal disease, 90% achieved CR. The CR rate was 67% for those with advanced thoracic disease and 29% for those with advanced abdominal disease. Patients who had embryonal carcinoma and those who had no elevation of alpha-fetoprotein had a higher frequency of CRs. Myelosuppression with a leukocyte count drop less than 1000/mm3 occurred in three patients, and no patient had
chronic renal failure
or pulmonary fibrosis. One patient died from
sepsis
while in complete remission.
...
PMID:VAB-4 combination chemotherapy in the treatment of metastatic testis tumors. 616 66
A nephelometric method is described for determination of plasminogen and two types of plasmin inhibitors in human plasma having different affinity toward plasmin. This method is based on the kinetic analysis of effects of whole plasma and plasmin inhibitor fraction obtained from plasma on the activity of exogenously added plasminogen which was determined by measuring the decrease of light scattering of fibrin suspension. With this method we have determined the activity of plasminogen and two types of inhibitors in the plasma of normal subjects and patients with high fibrinogen degradation product values. They include patients with various malignant tumors with DIC,
chronic renal failure
,
sepsis
, vascular diseases, and liver cirrhosis with hepatoma.
...
PMID:Nephelometric determination of plasminogen and plasmin inhibitors in human plasma using fibrin suspension as a substrate. 622 10
The incidence of nonobstructive colonic dilatation (NCD) is unknown, but the attendant mortality associated with perforation is nearly 50%. Patients with
chronic renal failure
and transplant recipients may manifest many of the conditions that have been implicated in the development of NCD. Mechanical obstruction and ischemic bowel disease must be eliminated as causes for colon dilatation. Over a four-year period eight patients (mean age 50 years) were treated for presumed NCD. Six patients with a mean cecal diameter of 12.8 cm were treated initially with colonoscopy. Five patients (83%) had successful endoscopic decompression; of the three remaining patients, one underwent urgent ileocolectomy for cecal ischemia after unsuccessful endoscopic decompression, a second (cecal diameter 13 cm) had a tube cecostomy performed as an initial procedure, and the third (cecal diameter 9 cm) was managed successfully with enemas and nasogastric suction. Two deaths occurred in the series (25%), but both were unrelated to colon distension. No complications of colonoscopy were observed. The sequelae of massive NCD (cecal ischemia, perforation, and protracted
sepsis
) are poorly tolerated in the immunocompromised patient. Conservative management may be employed in patients with a cecal diameter of 9 cm, but urgent diagnostic and therapeutic colonoscopy is recommended for patients with a cecal diameter of 12 cm or greater. Operative tube cecostomy may be necessary if colonoscopic decompression is unsuccessful or cannot be performed.
...
PMID:Treatment alternatives in renal failure and renal transplantation patients with nonobstructive colonic dilatation. 634 13
Hypertension, phosphate retention, hyperfiltration hyalinosis and the natural course of the underlying are well known factors leading to progression of
chronic renal failure
. Acute bacterial interstitial nephritis occurring in a previously diseased kidney, although well documented in experimental animals, has not been shown to aggravate
chronic renal failure
in man. We report on 3 cases of acute suppurative interstitial nephritis, due to E. coli urinary infection complicated by septicemia. All had rapid aggravation of previously mild renal failure secondary to chronic interstitial nephritis.
Sepsis
originated from the urinary tract which in 2 instances had been temporarily obstructed. Renal biopsy disclosed a diffuse interstitial infiltrate containing numerous polymorphonuclear leukocytes. This was superimposed on chronic tubular and interstitial lesions. In 1 case there were glomerular lesions with crescents and mesangial C3 deposits. A 2nd biopsy performed in 2 cases was of prognostic interest. In one case it showed active lesions and the necessity of continuing the treatment and in the other a satisfactory healing allowing cessation of therapy. Treatment was guided by antibiograms, the clinical and urinary signs of activity, renal biopsy findings and antibiotics known to be concentrated in renal tissue. The duration of treatment seemed important for the regression of acute renal lesions. Hematogenous bacterial interstitial nephritis should be considered as a possible cause of aggravation in
chronic renal failure
.
...
PMID:[Acute hematogenic interstitial nephritis of urinary origin: an unrecognized factor in the exacerbation of chronic kidney failure]. 634 71
A case of multiple myeloma in a 41-year-old white man that resulted in
chronic renal failure
is discussed. During the period of hemodialysis treatment, remission of the patient's myeloma was induced by chemotherapy. Thereafter a transplanted cadaver kidney functioned well for 3.5 years despite episodes of
sepsis
, administration of nephrotoxic chemotherapeutic agents, and recurrence of the myeloma with intermittent excretion of Bence Jones protein in the urine. The results of this fully documented case, as well as two other cases we have previously reported, support the strategy of offering cadaver renal transplantation to carefully selected individuals who require long-term dialysis and whose myeloma is in remission after chemotherapy.
...
PMID:Renal transplantation in a patient with multiple myeloma and light chain nephropathy. 640 97
Current concepts in the nutritional support of patients with renal disease are reviewed. In
chronic renal failure
, alterations in fat, carbohydrate, and glycogen metabolism usually occur and may be worsened by acute illness. Total parenteral nutrient (TPN) therapy is rarely required unless complications occur. In contrast, acute renal failure is generally associated with hypovolemia,
sepsis
, soft tissue injury, and coagulation defects, all of which influence metabolism and extracellular fluid volume; the gluconeogenesis that often occurs in these patients masks the metabolic effects of uremia. Nutritional support of patients with renal disease aims at providing adequate nutrients while limiting accumulation of nitrogenous waste. Current concepts concerning essential amino acids (EAAs), nonessential amino acids (NEAAs), and urea recycling are reviewed. The caloric needs of patients with renal failure are assumed to be similar to those of other hospitalized patients. There is no clinically important advantage of using an EAA formulation rather than mixed (EAA and NEAA) amino acids. Since fluid restriction is recommended and protein use is improved with diets with a high calorie-to-nitrogen ratio, the use of TPN solutions with dextrose 350 g is recommended. If glucose intolerance is severe, fat should be considered as a calorie source. Recommendations for monitoring the metabolic status of patients with renal failure receiving nutritional support are reviewed. Monitoring the metabolic status of patients with renal disease is crucial to providing safe and effective nutritional therapy. There appears to be no clinically important advantage to amino acid products specially formulated for use in renal disease.
...
PMID:Nutritional support of patients with renal disease. 642 98
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