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Query: UMLS:C0341503 (
bacterial peritonitis
)
1,303
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
DTH skin reactions can identify a population of surgical patients at increased risk for
sepsis
and related mortality. The usefulness of the technique is increased by repeating the test during the hospital course and by calculating a DTH score, which is the sum of the diameter of induration of all five or six tests expressed in millimeters. Regression analysis of factors that could possibly indicate development of
sepsis
and death after surgical treatment reveals that the most powerful predictors are serum albumin, DTH score and age of the patient. The population of patients who are anergic are more frequently malnourished than reactive patients, but the DTH response cannot be used to determine the malnourished state in individual patients. The lack of a DTH reaction (anergy) identifies an immune defect characterized by a failure of release of lymphokines in vivo. Lymphokines from normal individuals can restore to normal the absent response of anergic patients to specific antigens. In experimental animals made anergic by a heat injury, the mortality rate from
bacterial peritonitis
can be significantly lowered by lymphokines. Immunomodulation of demonstrated defects in host resistance is an exciting prospect for the future of surgical patients.
...
PMID:Delayed type hypersensitivity testing in surgical patients. 327 96
The concept of early selective mitochondrial injury has been proposed to explain the global metabolic dysfunction observed in the septic state. A two phase study was undertaken to test the validity of this hypothesis. In the initial phase, an endotoxin shock model was employed in the rat to delineate the function of skeletal muscle mitochondria. Mitochondrial function was determined polarimetrically, comparing state three and state four rates, respiratory control index (RCI) and ADP:O ratios. No significant alteration in these parameters was observed in the endotoxic state. Phase II of the study was designed to investigate mitochondrial function in a
bacterial peritonitis
rat model. Both liver and skeletal muscle mitochondrial function were determined to control for possible alterations in liver metabolism. Neither muscle nor liver mitochondria exhibited functional impairment during
sepsis
. We conclude from this study that neither endotoxemia nor peritonitis selectively "kills" mitochondria as previously suggested.
...
PMID:Mitochondrial death in sepsis: a failed concept. 352 91
A cirrhotic woman developed pneumococcal pneumonia with
sepsis
. Antibiotic therapy initially resulted in defervescence. However, nonobstructive colonic dilatation developed along with fever and clinical deterioration. Abdominal paracentesis and blood cultures revealed Escherichia coli
bacterial peritonitis
and bacteremia. The patient died. Autopsy revealed massive cecal mucosal ulceration, which was interpreted as the cause of the
bacterial peritonitis
.
...
PMID:Fatal bacterial peritonitis secondary to nonobstructive colonic dilatation (Ogilvie's syndrome) in cirrhotic ascites. 354 8
Splenectomized patients are predisposed toward developing overwhelming bacterial infections. Administration of heparin is known to improve the survival of animals with intraabdominal
sepsis
and endotoxemia. The present study evaluates the effect of splenectomy and heparin administration on survival and plasma fibronectin (FN) levels in rats during acute
bacterial peritonitis
. Peritonitis was induced by cecal ligation and puncture (CLP) in 48 male Sprague-Dawley rats divided into four equal groups (12 each). Eight rats (66.7%) survived 10 days following CLP. When splenectomy was performed simultaneously (CLPS), the survival rate declined to 16.7% (P less than 0.05). Twenty units of heparin given subcutaneously daily for 5 days improved the survival rate to 66.7% following CLPS (P less than 0.05). When heparin was administered following CLP, the survival rate improved to 83.3% (not significantly higher than CLP alone). Plasma FN levels were measured by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) on Days 0, 1, 2, 4, 7, and 10 following surgery. The plasma FN levels in splenectomized rats (CLPS +/- heparin) and nonsplenectomized rats (CLP +/- heparin) peaked on the first and second postoperative days, respectively. In comparing FN levels, no significant differences were found between the groups except on the second day--the CLPS + heparin group had a significantly lower FN level on Day 2 than CLP +/- heparin. This suggests that heparin confers protection from intraabdominal
sepsis
not only in animals with normal spleens but also in splenectomized animals. Plasma FN levels are not strongly influenced by heparin administration and concomitant splenectomy.
...
PMID:The effects of heparin and splenectomy on survival and plasma fibronectin levels in rat peritonitis. 374 93
Acute, overwhelming
sepsis
or endotoxemia in experimental animals is associated with increased circulating levels of thromboxane (Tx)B2 (stable metabolite of TxA2) and 6-keto PGF1 alpha (stable metabolite of prostacyclin). The purpose of the present investigation was to determine the plasma prostanoid response to
sepsis
using an animal paradigm in which the septic process evolved more slowly than in previous similar studies.
Bacterial peritonitis
was induced in rats by cecal ligation (group B) or cecal ligation plus puncture with a 22-gauge needle (group C). Compared to sham-operated controls (group A), levels of immunoreactive 6-keto PGF1 alpha were significantly (p less than .05) elevated in group C rats at 6, 12, and 24 hr after surgery. At 48 hr after surgery, levels of this prostanoid were significantly (p less than .05) elevated in group B animals. In contrast, TxB2 levels were never significantly increased in septic (groups B and C) as compared to control (group A) rats. These data are consistent with results from several clinical studies and emphasize an important difference between the cecal ligation model and other experimental
sepsis
paradigms.
...
PMID:Plasma levels of 6-keto PGF1 alpha but not TxB2 increase in rats with peritonitis due to cecal ligation. 384 Apr 15
Gram-negative
sepsis
was induced in rats by intraperitoneal injection of Escherichia coli. The development of
bacterial peritonitis
and septicemia was monitored by counting the number of peritoneal cells and by performing cultures of blood samples. Mortality reached a 50% rate when rats were injected with 2 X 10(8) colony-forming units. Rats injected with the doses of bacteria which induced mortality showed a time- and dose-dependent increase of vascular permeability as judged by the presence of abundant peritoneal exudate and by the depletion of the circulating volume. In order to know whether the generation of PAF-acether could be involved in the development of the permeability changes, the formation of this mediator was measured in the peritoneal cells and spleen of animals at different times and in response to different doses of E. coli. Significant amounts of PAF-acether could be obtained preceding the development of blood volume depletion in response to the injection of doses of E. coli which induced both mortality and the development of permeability. These data suggest that PAF-acether might be one of the inflammatory mediators involved in the pathogenesis of the hemodynamic changes observed in endotoxemia.
...
PMID:Synthesis of PAF-acether and blood volume changes in gram-negative sepsis. 388 98
We studied the effects of systemic
sepsis
on peripheral microcirculatory fluid exchange by examining changes in flow (Qlymph) and lymph-to-plasma [L/P] total protein and albumin ratios from lymph draining, the efferent duct of a prefemoral lymph node in sheep, before and during surgically-induced peritonitis. After baseline study, peritonitis was produced by cecal ligation, perforation, and devascularization. By 24 hours blood cultures revealed a polymicrobial bacteremia. The hemodynamic response to the septic insult during the 72-hour study period was characterized by an increase in heart rate and an initial fall in stroke volume index; yet, the mean blood pressure remained unchanged from baseline levels throughout the study protocol. The intrapulmonary shunt fraction increased (p less than 0.05) by 48 hours, as did both the Qlymph (2.6 +/- 1.9 ml/hr to 6.8 +/- 4.6 ml/hr; p less than 0.05) and the calculated lymph albumin clearance (1.6 +/- 1.2 ml/hr to 3.1 +/- 1.7 ml/hr; p less than 0.05). Although the calculated serum to interstitial colloid osmotic pressure gradient fell (F = 4.37; p less than 0.04), both the [L/P] total protein and albumin ratios were unchanged from baseline throughout 72 hours of study. Further, [L/P] total protein ratios were unrelated to Qlymph (r = -0.20); as Qlymph (experimental/baseline) increased with
sepsis
, [L/P] total protein ratio (experimental/baseline) did not fall (r = +0.62). We therefore conclude that systemic
sepsis
, as represented by this model of
bacterial peritonitis
, results in increased peripheral microcirculatory fluid flux that is primarily a consequence of an increase in permeability of the peripheral microvascular exchanging membrane.
...
PMID:Peripheral lymph flow in sheep with bacterial peritonitis: evidence for increased peripheral microvascular permeability accompanying systemic sepsis. 389 Feb 43
Two patients with alcoholic cirrhosis were seen on two separate occasions for fever, swollen legs, petechial hemorrhage, purpura, and cutaneous bullae. One patient ate oysters 2 days before the onset of illness. Vibrio vulnificus, a lactose-positive halophilic vibrio, was isolated from the ascitic and cutaneous fluid in both cases, and from the blood in one of the two cases. Both isolated strains were sensitive to the antibiotics given to the patients from the beginning; however, both patients died, one from septicemic shock and the other from massive esophageal variceal hemorrhage. Autopsies in both patients revealed alcoholic cirrhosis, hemorrhagic necrosis of the terminal ileum, intraalveolar hemorrhage, petechial hemorrhage in the peritoneum, and nonspecific acute inflammation of the dermis with vasculitis. Physicians should consider V. vulnificus in the differential diagnosis of cirrhotic patients with
sepsis
, primary skin lesions, and spontaneous
bacterial peritonitis
with or without history of recent oyster ingestion.
...
PMID:Spontaneous Vibrio vulnificus peritonitis and primary sepsis in two patients with alcoholic cirrhosis. 389 20
Acute abdomen, irreversible shock and sudden death are a typical although infrequent complication in patients with hemochromatosis. The author presents a further case of this syndrome and discusses the two leading pathogenetic interpretations described in the literature: sudden release of ferritin, and endotoxin shock. Clinical and post-mortem findings from this patient and a review of 19 cases from the literature suggest that most patients with this syndrome die from a primary
bacterial peritonitis
with gram negative
sepsis
and endotoxin shock.
...
PMID:[Acute abdomen with irreversible shock, a rare but typical complication of hemochromatosis]. 390 80
To characterize some of the remote effects of systemic
sepsis
on the lung, we evaluated changes in pulmonary microvascular fluid flux before and during
sepsis
secondary to a peritoneal focus of inflammation in sheep. We induced peritonitis by cecal ligation, perforation, and devascularization. During a subsequent 72-hour study period, both the mean blood pressure and the pulmonary capillary wedge pressure were unchanged, while the cardiac index increased slightly. The PaO2 fell by 48 hours (98 +/- 8 to 84 +/- 10 mm Hg; p less than 0.05) (mean +/- SD) and subsequently remained low throughout the experiment. Simultaneously, pulmonary lymph flow increased by 24 hours (11.5 +/- 4.9 to 26.7 +/- 13 ml/hr; p less than 0.05) and remained elevated throughout the experiment while [L/P] total protein ratios remained unchanged at 24 hours (baseline: 0.59 +/- 0.15 at 24 hours: 0.65 +/- 0.16). Morphologic examination of the lung showed that this model of peritonitis was characterized by neutrophil emigration into the pulmonary interstitium by 24 hours and interstitial edema by 48 hours. Therefore this model of
bacterial peritonitis
in sheep demonstrates that one of the remote effects of surgically induced systemic
sepsis
is an increase in permeability of the pulmonary microvascular membrane.
...
PMID:Pulmonary microvascular fluid flux in a large animal model of sepsis: evidence for increased pulmonary endothelial permeability accompanying surgically induced peritonitis in sheep. 394 25
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