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Query: UMLS:C0341503 (bacterial peritonitis)
1,303 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Cirrhosis of the liver results from a variety of mechanisms that cause progressive hepatic injury. It is the sixth leading cause of death in all patients between the ages of 35 and 55. This study attempts to correlate the morbidity and mortality of spontaneous bacterial peritonitis in liver failure patients to numerous etiologic and clinical variables. A retrospective review of 26 patients with spontaneous bacterial peritonitis associated with chronic liver disease was performed in a university hospital. Demographics (age and gender), clinical variables (etiology of liver failure, Child's classification, prior history of ascites, fever, abdominal pain, encephalopathy, and upper gastrointestinal hemorrhage), and laboratory variables (ascitic polymorphonuclearcyte count and cultures, serum albumin, bilirubin, creatinine, and prothrombin time) were studied. All of the patients had Child's C liver disease. Mortality rate was 46 per cent. Alcohol (46%) and hepatitis (30%) were the most common etiologies. Escherichia coli and Klebsiella pneumoniae were the most common culture isolates. All of the infections were monomicrobial. The only significant predictor of mortality (P < 0.05) in this study was the peritoneal fluid polymorphonuclear (PMN) cell count. PMN count >1000 PMN/mm3 was associated with a mortality of 88 per cent. Few patients with spontaneous bacterial peritonitis are ultimately transplanted.
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PMID:Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis in liver failure. 984 34

A fatal case of cerebral mucormycosis occurring shortly after liver transplantation is described. The patient was a 32-yr-old male with advanced end-stage liver disease manifested by tense ascites, spontaneous bacterial peritonitis, deepening jaundice and anuria requiring hemodialysis. The 3rd day after successful liver transplantation the patient developed acute respiratory failure, then focal motor signs. Computed tomography showed fluid in the left maxillary sinus, partial opacification of the ethmoid and sphenoid sinuses, and diffuse low density lesions in both cerebral hemispheres. Despite treatment for cerebritis and cerebral edema, the patient's pupils became fixed and dilated, and brain death was declared. Autopsy revealed mucor sinusitis and cerebritis. Mucormycosis is an opportunistic fungal infection occurring in patients with diabetic ketoacidosis, malignancy, or immunodeficiency, and in those receiving wide-spectrum antibiotics, corticosteroids, or cytotoxic therapy. Mucor most frequently involves the face, rhinocerebral disease predominating. These infections are difficult to treat, but are curable with aggressive and frequent surgical debridement, discontinuation or reduction of immunosuppressive therapy and amphotericin. The diagnosis of mucormycosis is very difficult to make in cases such as the present one, in which the typical presentation and classical signs are not present. A high index of suspicion based on identified risk factors may assist in more rapid diagnosis of this life-threatening mycosis.
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PMID:Cerebral mucormycosis after liver transplantation: a case report. 985 Apr 59

We report on a young patient with decompensated alcohol-induced liver disease (Child-Pugh score C) who presented with clinical, biochemical and radiological evidence suggestive of spontaneous bacterial peritonitis. She was however subsequently found to have multiple small bowel perforations, which were diagnosed only at laparotomy. The histology of the bowel showed evidence of vasculitis. This case illustrates two important points. Firstly, even if a patient has all the prerequisites to develop spontaneous bacterial peritonitis, a secondary cause of peritonitis (eg. bowel perforation or intra-abdominal abscess) must always be considered as a differential diagnosis and a repeat ascitic tap is mandatory after 48 h of antibiotic therapy to confirm a decrease in the white cell count. Secondly, it shows the rare co-existence of alcoholic liver disease and vasculitis.
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PMID:Vasculitic small bowel perforation masquerading as spontaneous bacterial peritonitis in a patient with decompensated liver disease. 1032 67

An ad hoc Committee appointed by the Italian Association for the Study of the Liver prepared these Clinical Practice Guidelines for the Management of Cirrhotic Patients with Ascites. The initial evaluation of a patient with ascites should include a history, physical evaluation, paracentesis with ascitic fluid analysis, abdominal ultrasonography and biochemistry to assess the severity of liver disease and renal functionality. To improve the efficiency of the choice between the different opportunities available in the treatment of ascites, patients can be classified into two subgroups: patients with uncomplicated ascites and patients with complicated ascites, including refractory ascites, bacterial peritonitis, hyponatraemia and renal failure. Based upon evidence emerging from controlled clinical trials or case-control studies, satisfactory treatment for uncomplicated ascites is represented by paracentesis, sodium-restricted diet and diuretics, whereas the treatment of patients with complicated ascites requires other specific approaches. As the prognosis for most patients with ascites is poor, the last part of the paper offers simple criteria in the selection of patients candidates for liver transplantation. The aim of these guidelines is to reduce inappropriate practice and to improve efficiency in the management of patients with ascites. The Committee holds that a periodic update will be necessary to conform to future scientific developments.
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PMID:Clinical practice guidelines for the management of cirrhotic patients with ascites. Committee on Ascites of the Italian Association for the Study of the Liver. 1060 7

Liver diseases are an important cause of high morbidity and mortality in HIV-infected patients, and liver cirrhosis is the commonest cause of ascites in this population. We describe the case of a 38-year-old HIV-positive male (CDC stage B3, CD4 cell count 199/mm3) with a history of hepatitis C-associated liver cirrhosis. Following pneumonia he developed spontaneous bacterial peritonitis due to Streptococcus constellatus. Clinically noticeable was the gradually worsening course with few symptoms, despite the initially high ascitic fluid leucocyte count of over 11,000/microliter, but a favourable response to betalactam antibiotics.
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PMID:[Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis with Streptococcus constellatus in an HIV positive patient]. 1068 83

The gut and the liver are the key organs in nutrient absorption and metabolism. Bile acids, drugs, and toxins undergo extensive enterohepatic circulation. Bile acids play a major role in several hepatic and intestinal diseases. Endotoxins deriving from intestinal Gram-negative bacteria are important in the pathogenesis of liver and systemic diseases. Chronic liver diseases can influence gastrointestinal motility, which together with other factors may contribute to bacterial overgrowth and in patients with ascites to an increased risk of spontaneous bacterial peritonitis. Patients with end-stage liver disease frequently develop portal hypertension leading to varices, gastric vascular ectasia, and portal hypertensive gastroenteropathy. Several liver and biliary abnormalities are observed in patients with inflammatory bowel disease (primary sclerosing cholangitis, autoimmune hepatitis, cholelithiasis). The primary defect in hemochromatosis is located in the intestine, causing an inappropriate increase in iron absorption, and the liver is the site of earliest and heaviest iron deposition. Elevated transaminases are observed in many patients with celiac disease, and steatohepatitis frequently develops in patients with jejunoileal bypass and short bowel syndrome. Furthermore, the liver is the primary organ for metastasis of intestinal cancer. Many viral, bacterial, fungal, and parasitic diseases affect the intestine as well as the liver and the biliary tract.
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PMID:Gut-liver axis. 1085 47

Most of the care of liver disease in alpha(1)-antitrypsin (alpha(1)-AT) deficiency involves supportive management for complications of chronic liver disease including gastrointestinal bleeding, ascites, edema, encephalopathy, coagulation disturbances, spontaneous bacterial peritonitis, and hepatorenal syndrome. Some of these patients will have manifestations of cholestatic injury, including pruritus, hypercholesterolemia, and steatorrhea with fat-soluble vitamin deficiencies. The major challenge for the clinician taking care of these patients is the timing of referral for liver transplantation therapy. Timing of such referral is a relatively straightforward decision in alpha(1)-AT-deficient patients with progressive liver dysfunction. Some patients have nonprogressive or slowly progressing liver disease even after the development of cirrhosis or portal hypertension. Timing of liver transplantation in these patients should not be based simply on the presence of cirrhosis, portal hypertension or mild liver synthetic dysfunction, but rather on the basis of a subjective judgment by the hepatologist, patient, and family that manifestations of liver disease are interfering with overall life functioning.
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PMID:Alpha(1)-Antitrypsin Deficiency. 1109 5

In cirrhosis of the liver, according to the peripheral arterial vasodilation hypothesis, relative underfilling of the arterial tree triggers a neurohumoral response (activation of renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system, sympathetic nervous system, nonosmotic release of vasopressin) aimed at restoring circulatory integrity by promoting renal sodium and water retention. Evidence has accumulated for a major role of increased vascular production of nitric oxide as the primary cause of arterial vasodilation in cirrhosis. Ascites is a common complication in cirrhosis. Treatment of ascites consists of a low salt diet with diuretics, and paracentesis together with plasma volume expanders in diuretic-resistant patients. Progression of cirrhosis may result in hepatorenal syndrome, a state of functional renal failure that carries an ominous prognosis. Orthotopic liver transplantation has remained the only curative treatment for patients with advanced liver disease; other modalities such as transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunt or vasopressin analogues may serve as a bridge to transplantation. Another complication of decompensated cirrhosis is spontaneous bacterial peritonitis, the incidence of which can be reduced by primary or secondary antibiotic prophylaxis by using orally active antibiotics.
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PMID:Update on peripheral arterial vasodilation, ascites and hepatorenal syndrome in cirrhosis. 1111 Jun 23

A recent mandate emphasizes severity of liver disease to determine priorities in allocating organs for liver transplantation and necessitates a disease severity index based on generalizable, verifiable, and easily obtained variables. The aim of the study was to examine the generalizability of a model previously created to estimate survival of patients undergoing the transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunt (TIPS) procedure in patient groups with a broader range of disease severity and etiology. The Model for End-Stage Liver Disease (MELD) consists of serum bilirubin and creatinine levels, International Normalized Ratio (INR) for prothrombin time, and etiology of liver disease. The model's validity was tested in 4 independent data sets, including (1) patients hospitalized for hepatic decompensation (referred to as "hospitalized" patients), (2) ambulatory patients with noncholestatic cirrhosis, (3) patients with primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC), and (4) unselected patients from the 1980s with cirrhosis (referred to as "historical" patients). In these patients, the model's ability to classify patients according to their risk of death was examined using the concordance (c)-statistic. The MELD scale performed well in predicting death within 3 months with a c-statistic of (1) 0.87 for hospitalized patients, (2) 0.80 for noncholestatic ambulatory patients, (3) 0.87 for PBC patients, and (4) 0.78 for historical cirrhotic patients. Individual complications of portal hypertension had minimal impact on the model's prediction (range of improvement in c-statistic: <.01 for spontaneous bacterial peritonitis and variceal hemorrhage to ascites: 0.01-0.03). The MELD scale is a reliable measure of mortality risk in patients with end-stage liver disease and suitable for use as a disease severity index to determine organ allocation priorities.
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PMID:A model to predict survival in patients with end-stage liver disease. 1143 56

Hepatorenal syndrome (HRS) is a unique form of acute renal failure occurring in patients with advanced liver disease. Despite the severe derangement of renal function and ominous prognosis, minimal pathologic abnormalities of the kidneys are found at autopsy. The kidneys, if transplanted, are capable of normal function, which supports the concept that renal failure is functional and potentially reversible. The pathogenesis of HRS is not completely known, but it is probably the result of an extreme underfilling of the arterial circulation secondary to an arterial vasodilation located in splanchnic circulation. Besides the renal circulation, all other extrasplanchnic vascular beds also appear to be vasoconstricted. The diagnosis of HRS is currently based on several widely accepted diagnostic criteria aimed at excluding nonfunctional causes of renal failure. Recently initiated therapeutic approaches lend a note of optimism to the future management of HRS. These include liver transplantation as definitive treatment for patients with end-stage liver disease, and introduction of new vasoconstrictor drugs with the preferential effect on the splanchnic circulation. The development of HRS after spontaneous bacterial peritonitis may be effectively prevented by the administration of albumin together with antibiotic therapy.
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PMID:Hepatorenal syndrome: new perspectives in pathophysiology and management. 1137 81


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