Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0341503 (
bacterial peritonitis
)
1,303
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Listeria monocytogenes is a Gram-positive bacillus that is pathogenic in both the normal and compromised host. We describe Listeria peritonitis and cerebritis in a patient with cirrhosis due to non-A, non-B hepatitis, and review the 11 other cases of Listeria peritonitis reported in the English-language literature. Listeria is a rare cause of peritonitis in debilitated, older patients, with two-thirds of the cases occurring in patients with
chronic liver disease
. Listeria peritonitis may also occur in patients undergoing peritoneal dialysis, or in those with malignancy. Peritonitis due to Listeria is clinically similar to spontaneous
bacterial peritonitis
, and is associated with fever, variable abdominal pain, and neutrocytic ascites; bacteremia commonly accompanies Listeria peritonitis. This syndrome can be successfully treated with antimicrobial drugs, although the third-generation cephalosporins commonly used in the therapy of spontaneous
bacterial peritonitis
are not recommended. Ampicillin may be the drug of choice, with combination therapy with an aminoglycoside reserved for cases that do not respond to ampicillin alone.
...
PMID:Listeria monocytogenes peritonitis: case report and literature review. 144 54
We present data on 10 patients (5 men and 5 women, aged 21-56 yrs) with end-stage liver disease or tumour who underwent orthotopic liver transplantation at Groote Schuur Hospital between October 1988 and June 1991. Standard surgical techniques were used for procuring the donor liver, the recipient hepatectomy and the implantation of the liver. The venovenous bypass method was used in all but 2 patients. Postoperative immunosuppression was usually achieved with cyclosporin, azathioprine and low-dose steroids. Six patients were treated with prophylactic OKT3. Rejection episodes were treated with bolus doses of intravenous steroids. The indications for liver transplantation included chronic active hepatitis progressing to cirrhosis (5), biliary cirrhosis in association with inflammatory bowel disease (1), sclerosing cholangitis (2), alpha 1-antitrypsin deficiency (1), and tumour (1). All patients with
chronic liver disease
had experienced at least one complication, examples of which included encephalopathy,
bacterial peritonitis
, ascites, variceal bleeding and septicaemia. Serious postoperative complications included acute rejection of the transplanted liver, renal and liver failure that responded to intensive care support and medical management. One patient died on the 11th postoperative day with complications of bleeding oesophageal ulcer, shock and fungaemia. The remaining patients are alive and well 1-31 months after transplantation.
...
PMID:Orthotopic liver transplantation at Groote Schuur Hospital. 150 34
A prospective research was made on spontaneous
bacterial peritonitis
(SBP) in
chronic liver disease
patients presenting with ascites. Forty clinical cases, of 37 patients, were analysed. All subjects were submitted to clinical and laboratory evaluation and diagnostic paracentesis, and the material was obtained for biochemical dosages, pH determination, cytology and bacterial cultures. Thirty cases of sterile ascites and 10 of SBP (25%) were detected. In 5 (50%) with SBP, the clinical findings were characteristic, with fever, abdominal pain and rebound tenderness. In 2 patients (20%) the presentation was atypical, without the complete triad described above. Finally in 3 (30%) SBP was silent, without any suggestive clinical manifestations of infection. In 7 cases (70%) cultures were positives; Streptococcus pneumoniae (3 cases), Streptococcus pyogenes, Staphylococcus negative coagulase, Staphylococcus aureus and Klebsiella pneumoniae (one case each). In 7 (70%) SBP cases, the patients were admitted already infected in the hospital. Lethality in the SBP group was 30% and in the sterile ascites was 13.3%. We concluded that SBP is a frequent cause of morbid-lethality in patients with ascites and chronic hepatopathy, presenting itself often in a typical clinical manifestations.
...
PMID:[Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis: occurrence in chronic liver disease patients in Recife]. 184 42
During a 21-month period, 65 consecutive patients admitted with ascites were included in a prospective study of the incidence of spontaneous
bacterial peritonitis
, and paracentesis was performed on admission. The ascitic fluid was cultured, ascitic leucocytes were counted and pH was measured. Bacterial growth was found in five patients with
chronic liver disease
, who were diagnosed as having spontaneous
bacterial peritonitis
(SBP), since no intra-abdominal focus could be demonstrated. Thus, the incidence of SBP in this material was 7.7% (95% confidence limits: 2.5-17%). SBP was caused by Escherichia coli (n = 3), coagulase negative staphylococcus (n = 1), and Bacteroides species (n = 1). Abdominal tenderness, abnormal intestinal sounds, fever and hepatic encephalopathy were equally frequent in the group with SBP and in patients with sterile ascites. Infection was not anticipated in any of the patients with SBP. In contrast to several previous studies, neither ascites pH nor ascites leucocyte counts were any help in obtaining a rapid diagnosis. Survival time of patients with SBP was significantly shorter than of patients without SBP.
...
PMID:Incidence of spontaneous bacterial peritonitis in patients with ascites. Diagnostic value of white blood cell count and pH measurement in ascitic fluid. 194 6
Chemical analysis of ascitic fluid may be helpful in determining the underlying disease. We discuss the diagnostic accuracy of the common and newer chemical parameters (protein, LDH, lactate, glucose, cholesterol, triglycerides, phospholipids, fibronectin, albumin gradient [value of serum minus value of ascites], ferritin, tumor markers, immunomodulators, leukocytes, bacterial and cytologic examinations). We also review the pathogenesis and clinical findings of the most frequent ascites forms (benign hepatic, infective, malignant ascites, ascites associated with liver metastases or hepatocellular carcinoma, cardiac and pancreatic ascites) and the most important diagnosis criteria. In the malignant ascites a high cholesterol, a narrow albumin gradient or a high ferritin value have high diagnostic accuracy, but diagnosis is by the finding of malignant cells. For the diagnosis of infective ascites, bacteriology is mandatory even though the results are negative in most cases, particularly in spontaneous
bacterial peritonitis
where diagnosis has to be established clinically, by a low pH or by a high leukocyte count. Benign hepatic ascites is diagnosed by demonstrating an underlying
chronic liver disease
and laboratory examinations of the peritoneal fluid to exclude other causes. The laboratory tests in ascites associated with liver metastases or with hepatocellular carcinoma were similar to those in benign hepatic ascites and the two ascites forms must be separated by other clinical and technical findings. Pancreatic ascites can easily be distinguished from the other forms by the high amylase and lipase content.
...
PMID:[Laboratory chemical analysis in ascites]. 203 10
Rational treatment of portal hypertensive complications requires a knowledge of the cause of portal hypertension and an assessment of the severity of liver disease. In the United States,
chronic liver disease
, usually due to alcohol, is the most common underlying cause. The history, physical examination, and laboratory analysis are usually sufficient to confirm the presence of underlying liver disease. If there is any question as to the etiology of portal hypertension, however, a more complete evaluation is required, whether the presenting complication is ascites, variceal bleeding, or hypersplenism. Usually, such an evaluation will require a liver biopsy, portal pressure measurement, and angiography. Occasionally, a noninvasive evaluation will be sufficient, but the value of these noninvasive parameters is still under investigation. Surgical mortality generally depends on the severity of the liver disease. Therefore, surgical intervention must be carefully considered in comparison to other therapeutic modalities depending on the patient's hepatic functional reserve. Secondary
bacterial peritonitis
due to perforation requires surgery regardless of the severity of the underlying liver disease.
...
PMID:Diagnosis and hemodynamic assessment of portal hypertension. 218 5
Since the introduction of the LeVeen modification of the peritoneovenous shunt (PVS) in 1974, these devices have been placed in a relatively large number of patients. The most common indication has been for medically intractable ascites in the setting of
chronic liver disease
. A review of a series of studies shows that we can expect approximately an 18% perioperative overall mortality rate, a 46% survival rate at 21 months, and loss of ascites in 59% of the survivors at 18 months. The PVS has not been shown by prospective trials to prolong survival significantly in patients with either intractable ascites or the hepatorenal syndrome (HRS), although it may shorten hospitalizations, compared with medical controls. A few well-documented cases of reversal of the HRS have been documented. The best results of PVS therapy have been evident in those patients with milder liver disease. The loss of ascites need not correlate with a functioning shunt. Alcohol abstinance is associated with hepatic functional recovery and may relate to the disappearance of renal sodium retention, resulting in shunt occlusion due to low flow. A number of serious complications with the PVS have been described. Nutritional repletion follows successful shunting, but might, in part, relate to simultaneous alcohol abstention. The more common complications of coagulopathy and fluid overload are preventable by total ascitic drainage at the time of surgery. Shunt patency remains a clinical problem. Only 18.6% of the total shunts placed functioned in the survivors at 2 yr. Perioperative infections with staphylococcal and Gram-negative organisms occur. Postoperative
bacterial peritonitis
or septicemia requires shunt removal for cure.
...
PMID:The peritoneovenous shunt: expectations and reality. 219 58
Bacterial infection is a serious and often fatal complication of patients with liver disease and can prove fatal either directly or by precipitation of gastrointestinal bleeding, renal failure, or hepatic encephalopathy. At greatest risk are patients with alcoholic cirrhosis or decompensated
chronic liver disease
, or cases of acute liver disease who progress to fulminant hepatic failure or subacute hepatic necrosis. Infection appears to be unusual in patients with primary biliary cirrhosis. The site and type of infection is unrelated to the aetiology of the liver disease. Bacteraemia, pneumonia, urinary tract infection and spontaneous
bacterial peritonitis
are most common but infective endocarditis and meningitis, especially with pneumococci, are easily overlooked. Clinical suspicion of infection must be high as the only indication may be a general deterioration in the patients' clinical state, increasing encephalopathy or renal impairment. In the case of patients with fulminant hepatic failure, infection may precipitate the initial or recurrent encephalopathy and contributes to death in 10% of fatal cases. Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis is now recognized to occur in the absence of clinical features of peritonitis. The PMN content of the ascitic fluid may provide the only indication of infection and is the most readily available screening test. The most common types of organism responsible for all types of infection are Gram-negative enteric and streptococci, especially pneumococci, while infection with anaerobes is rare. Risk factors for infection include decompensated alcoholic liver disease, fulminant hepatic failure, gastrointestinal bleeding, invasive practical procedures and impaired host defence mechanisms against infection. Of the host defence mechanisms, impaired function of the reticuloendothelial system, complement, and PMNs represent the most common and serious defects. Defects of humoral immunity are present in ascitic fluid from patients with cirrhosis and are probably a major reason for development of spontaneous
bacterial peritonitis
. Diuresis improves these functions and reduces the risk of peritonitis. Treatment of infections even with the appropriate antibiotic is still associated with a high mortality but the use of adjuvant gut sterilization is promising, particularly in cases infected with Gram-negative enteric organisms. Infusions of fresh frozen plasma, blood and cryoprecipitate improve some systemic host defences and may be beneficial in the treatment and reduction of risk of infection.
...
PMID:Bacterial infections complicating liver disease. 265 49
To evaluate the diagnostic accuracy of fibronectin levels in ascites to differentiate malignant from non-malignant ascites, the authors studied 30 patients with sterile uncomplicated ascites in
chronic liver disease
, 18 patients with malignant ascites and four patients with spontaneous
bacterial peritonitis
. Fibronectin concentration was significantly higher in malignant ascites than in sterile ascites (P less than 0.001). High values (greater than 85 mg/l) were found in four of six cases of hepatocellular carcinoma in liver cirrhosis with negative cytologic examination, and in six of seven peritoneal carcinomatoses. Low values (less than 85 mg/l) were found in four patients with liver metastases and in one patient with intrahepatic biliary duct carcinoma in cirrhosis. In four patients with infected ascites, the fibronectin level was low. Among all other parameters (total protein concentration, lactate dehydrogenase, gamma-glutamyl-transpeptidase, pH, amylase, triglycerides, leukocyte count, and cytologic examination), fibronectin yielded the best degree of discrimination (diagnostic accuracy, 79%).
...
PMID:Diagnostic accuracy of fibronectin in the differential diagnosis of ascites. 302 17
We prospectively studied 51 consecutive bacteremic patients with
chronic liver disease
in order to evaluate their clinical presentation and to assess the relationship of various clinical parameters to mortality. Forty-two patients had alcoholic liver disease and 40 were in Class C, by the Pugh modification of Child's criteria. Soft tissue infections were the most common source of bacteremia, followed by pneumonia, spontaneous
bacterial peritonitis
and urinary tract infection. Gram positive organisms were isolated in 69% of cases, and Gram negative ones in 31%. In nine patients, no source of bacteremia was detected. Leukocytosis occurred in 59% of patients and bandemia in only 41%. Although appropriate antibiotic therapy was begun in all cases on admission, 17 patients (33%) died in the hospital. Of 38 clinical parameters evaluated, multivariate analysis revealed that the three variables contributing the most independent information toward predicting in-hospital mortality were the absence of a history of fever, an elevated serum creatinine and marked leukocytosis. Improved understanding of the pathophysiologic relationship between these parameters and patient outcome may enable us to improve the therapy of bacteremic patients with
chronic liver disease
.
...
PMID:A prospective evaluation of bacteremic patients with chronic liver disease. 341 30
1
2
3
4
5
Next >>