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Query: UMLS:C0341503 (
bacterial peritonitis
)
1,303
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The clinical significance and prognosis of culture-negative neutrocytic ascites in cirrhotic patients is a controversial topic. In the present study, the clinical and humoral presentation and the short- and long-term prognosis were analyzed in 36 patients with cirrhosis and culture-positive spontaneous
bacterial peritonitis
and in 28 patients with cirrhosis and ascitic fluid polymorphonuclear count greater than 250/mm3, a negative ascitic fluid culture, and without previous antibiotic therapy. On admission there were no significant differences between groups related to age, sex, alcoholism, fever, abdominal pain, serum albumin, serum
urea
, serum creatinine, Child-Pugh score, polymorphonuclear count, and total protein concentration in ascitic fluid. A greater frequency of positive blood culture was found in patients with spontaneous
bacterial peritonitis
(15/21 vs 2/18) (P < 0.001). Mortality during the first episode was 36% in patients with spontaneous
bacterial peritonitis
and 46% in patients with culture-negative neutrocytic ascites (NS). Mortality during follow-up was high and survival probability at 12 months was 32% in spontaneous
bacterial peritonitis
and 31% in culture-negative neutrocytic ascites. The probability of recurrence at 12 months was 33% in spontaneous
bacterial peritonitis
and 34% in culture-negative neutrocytic ascites. Our results show that spontaneous
bacterial peritonitis
and culture-negative neutrocytic ascites are variants of the same disease with a high mortality and poor prognosis.
...
PMID:Analysis of clinical course and prognosis of culture-positive spontaneous bacterial peritonitis and neutrocytic ascites. Evidence of the same disease. 139 94
To delineate the natural clinical course of spontaneous
bacterial peritonitis
in hepatitis B-related cirrhosis and to determine if it occurs in hepatocellular carcinoma, a prospective survey was conducted in 262 patients over 2 1/2 years. The in-hospital incidence and mortality rates of spontaneous
bacterial peritonitis
were 21.6% and 36.4%, respectively, in cirrhosis and 7.3% and 50% in hepatocellular carcinoma. In cirrhosis, the cumulative probability of annual recurrence of spontaneous
bacterial peritonitis
was 47.3%, which was significantly higher than the annual probability of occurrence of 11.3% in those with no previous attack (P less than 0.0001). The cumulative probability of annual survival was 27.6% in the spontaneous
bacterial peritonitis
patients, significantly lower than the probability of 64.0% in the control group (P = 0.0001). A univariate analysis, with Kaplan-Meier curves compared by the Mantel-Cox test, and subsequent multivariate analysis by stepwise Cox regression procedure were used to evaluate 37 variables recorded immediately after admission. Blood
urea
nitrogen concentration greater than 10.5 mmol/L
urea
(greater than 30 mg/dL) and ascitic fluid protein concentration less than 7.35 g/L (less than 735 mg/dL) were found to be the only significant predictors of lower annual survival; ascitic fluid protein concentration less than 7.50 g/L (less than 750 mg/dL) was the only significant predictor of higher annual recurrence. The authors conclude that spontaneous
bacterial peritonitis
has a high risk of recurrence in hepatitis B-related cirrhosis and that the same disease occurring in patients with hepatocellular carcinoma is related to the underlying cirrhosis rather than the hepatocellular carcinoma.
...
PMID:Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis in patients with hepatitis B-related cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma. 165 49
One hundred and thirty-four patients using continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis (CAPD) for a mean time of 23.1 +/- 18.3 months (range, 1-76.6) from a single center are reviewed with respect to biochemistry, hematology, parameters of dialysis efficiency, nutrition, and the nature and frequency of complications. Cumulative patient survival was 90%, 86% and 75% at 1, 2 and 3 years, and survival of patients using this technique was 75%, 62% and 40% at corresponding time intervals with no difference demonstrated in diabetic patients or in those older than 50 years. Biochemical and hematologic parameters were well maintained with peritoneal creatinine clearance increasing and peritoneal protein loss remaining stable with ongoing CAPD. Loss of ultrafiltration, however, accounted for 17.7% of permanent transfers to alternative therapy. Low serum albumin and elevated serum triglyceride concentrations correlated with mortality, whereas low serum albumin, low cholesterol, and high phosphate levels correlated with morbidity as assessed by frequency of hospital admissions. Dietary protein intake assessed by
urea
generation rate was significantly lower than that estimated from a 24-hour dietary recall (0.82 vs. 1.02 g/kg/day, p less than 0.01) and with the exception of body mass index and serum albumin, anthropometric and visceral protein measurements showed few correlations with nutritional adequacy.
Bacterial peritonitis
remained the major complication, although fungal infections made a significant contribution to morbidity and mortality. Overall, CAPD is confirmed to be a satisfactory form of dialysis for all forms of end-stage renal failure and an integral part of any renal replacement program. However, nutritional adequacy and lowering of complication rates require further investigation.
...
PMID:Continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis. Eight years of experience at a single center. 267 97
The peritoneal generation of arachidonic acid metabolites was studied in eight patients with end-stage renal disease undergoing continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis (CAPD) during infection-free periods and during
bacterial peritonitis
. The prostacyclin metabolite 6-keto-PGF1 alpha was found to be the major prostanoid generated by human peritoneal mesothelium (1090 ng (6h)-1, SEM 86, n = 8) followed by lesser amounts of PGE2 (142 ng (6 h)-1, SEM 26, n = 8), PGF2 alpha (162 ng (6 h)-1, SEM 27, n = 8) and TXB2 (59 ng (6 h)-1, SEM 5, n = 8). During peritonitis a significant increase of all prostaglandins and TXB2 occurred (P less than 0.001). The ratio of the vasodilating prostaglandins and their metabolites (PGE2 and 6-keto-PGF1 alpha) to the vasoconstrictors and their metabolites (PGF2 alpha and TXB2) increased from 6.6 to 10.5 during peritoneal inflammation. Augmented peritoneal clearances of creatinin and
urea
and increased losses of proteins during peritonitis as well as the enhanced peritoneal generation of prostanoids were reduced to basal values by adequate antibiotic therapy. The present results suggest that the increased peritoneal blood flow during peritonitis, probably responsible for the observed changes of peritoneal transport properties, may be induced by a change in the ratio of vasoactive prostaglandins generated by peritoneal mesothelial cells.
...
PMID:Stimulation of peritoneal synthesis of vasoactive prostaglandins during peritonitis in patients on continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis. 392 79
Four children aged 6-10 years (body weight 20-31 kg) and one adolescent patient (age 17 years, 32 kg) were treated by continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis (CAPD) over periods of 4-14 months totalling 39 months. Dialysis volumes of 1 liter for the pediatric patients and 1.5 liters for the adolescent patient were exchanged four times daily: glucose concentration was 15 milligrams during three cycles and 42.5 milligrams during one cycle. Bag exchanges and general care of the younger patients were primarily carried out by their mothers. Overall rehabilitation and patients' acceptance were good despite several complications, but full school attendance was only achieved in 2 children. Uremia and fluid balance were well controlled despite minimal dietary restrictions. Average serum
urea
was 20 mmol/l and creatinine 700 mumol/l. Glucose reabsorption from dialysate was 1-4 g/kg per day.
Bacterial peritonitis
occurred six times and responded well to appropriate treatment. Its incidence decreased from one episode every 4-5 months (before July 1980) to one every 8 months. Protein losses in the dialysate were 0.10-0.17 g/kg per day in 4 children; the serum protein was 57-69 milligrams. One child with sterile peritonitis lost 0.46 g protein per kg per day and became frankly hypoproteinemic (47 micrograms). Technical problems included cuff erosion (3 cases), and dislocation (1) or malposition (1) of the Tenckhoff catheter. Statural growth was unsatisfactory in 2 children treated for more than 9 months. CAPD was terminated by cadaveric renal transplantation in 3 patients, and by recovery of renal function in one. One patient is still on CAPD. CAPD offers a valuable alternative to hemodialysis in selected pediatric patients. However, the choice between the two methods should be left to specialized child centers. The long-term potential of CAPD still remains to be defined.
...
PMID:[Continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis in children. 2 years' experience]. 705 Dec 75
Although spontaneous
bacterial peritonitis
is considered a precipitating factor of renal impairment in cirrhosis, no study specifically addressing this problem has been reported. This study was aimed at assessing the incidence, clinical course, predictive factors and prognosis of renal impairment in cirrhotic patients with peritonitis. Therefore, 252 consecutive episodes of spontaneous
bacterial peritonitis
in 197 patients were analyzed. Clinical and laboratory data obtained before and after diagnosis of peritonitis were considered as possible predictors of renal impairment and hospital mortality. Renal impairment occurred in 83 (33%) episodes, and in every instance it fulfilled the criteria of functional kidney failure. Renal impairment was progressive in 35 episodes, steady in 27 and transient in 21. Blood
urea
nitrogen and serum sodium concentration before peritonitis and band neutrophils count in blood at diagnosis were independent predictors for the development of renal impairment. Renal impairment was the strongest independent predictor of mortality during hospitalization. Other independent prognostic factors were blood
urea
nitrogen level before peritonitis, age, positive ascitic fluid culture and serum bilirubin level during infection. These results indicate that renal impairment is a frequent event in cirrhotic patients with spontaneous
bacterial peritonitis
that occurs mainly in patients with kidney failure before infection. Renal impairment is the most important predictor of hospital mortality in cirrhotic patients with spontaneous
bacterial peritonitis
.
...
PMID:Renal impairment after spontaneous bacterial peritonitis in cirrhosis: incidence, clinical course, predictive factors and prognosis. 798 50
Cefotaxime is the most commonly used antibiotic for initial therapy of spontaneous
bacterial peritonitis
in cirrhosis. However, since the introduction of cefotaxime no study has been performed to investigate factors influencing prognosis in cirrhotic patients with this type of infection. In this study, predictive factors for infection resolution and patient survival were investigated in 213 consecutive episodes of spontaneous
bacterial peritonitis
in 185 cirrhotic patients. All patients were initially treated with cefotaxime. One hundred sixty-five episodes (77%) resolved with cefotaxime alone, and two more episodes (1%), initially unresponsive to cefotaxime, were cured after modification of antibiotic therapy. In a multivariate analysis (stepwise logistic regression), only 4 of 51 clinical and laboratory variables obtained at the time of diagnosis of infection were identified as independent predictors of infection resolution: band neutrophils in white blood cell count, community-acquired vs. hospital-acquired peritonitis, blood
urea
nitrogen level and serum aspartate aminotransferase level. No patient experienced serious adverse effects related to cefotaxime. Eighty-two patients died during hospitalization (38% mortality rate in relation to the 213 episodes of peritonitis). In the multivariate analysis, six variables were independently correlated with survival: blood
urea
nitrogen level, serum aspartate aminotransferase level, community-acquired vs. hospital-acquired peritonitis, age, Child-Pugh score and ileus. No microbiological data had predictive value for infection resolution or survival.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis in cirrhosis: predictive factors of infection resolution and survival in patients treated with cefotaxime. 842 22
We have used a formal transplant protocol to select patients with alcoholic liver disease (ALD) for transplantation. We retrospectively analyzed all the patients with ALD who were referred specifically for transplantation to our Liver Unit between 1987 and 1994. Patients were selected for liver transplantation if they had end-stage liver disease and had remained abstinent from the time they were medically advised to stop alcohol intake. Of the 180 patients referred for transplantation, 43 (none of whom were transplanted) had case records insufficiently complete for full analysis; this may bias the analysis. Of the remaining 137 patients, 39 were transplanted and 4 were awaiting transplantation at the time of analysis. Of the patients who were not accepted for transplantation, 13 died during the assessment, 7 were considered to be unlikely to survive the procedure, 29 were found to be medically unsuitable, 16 psychologically unsuitable, 7 patients refused the offer of transplantation, and an additional 19 either showed clinical improvement or were considered too well for transplantation. Special investigations, such as brain computerized tomography (CT) scan and echocardiograph, changed the clinical decision to transplant in only a small number of cases (4% and 5%, respectively). Nine of the transplanted patients died and the remaining were followed up for a median of 25 (range, 7-63) months. One year actuarial survival for the transplanted patients was 79%, for those considered too sick was 0%, for medically unsuitable patients was 44%, for psychologically unsuitable patients was 65% and for those considered too well was 94%. Only 5 of the transplanted patients (13%) reverted to drinking. The observed actuarial survival of nontransplanted patients was compared with the expected survival calculated by 'the Beclere model.' The observed actuarial survival in the nontransplanted groups was much better than anticipated from the Beclere model, which therefore, is not applicable to our patients. The proportional hazards regression analysis of our nontransplanted patients identified serum bilirubin, serum albumin, blood
urea
, ascites, and spontaneous
bacterial peritonitis
as factors significantly predictive of their probability of survival. Using a model based on these parameters, the expected survival of our transplanted patients was calculated. Although we applied the model to a different population, the observed actuarial survival in the transplanted patients was found to be better than their expected survival (P < or = .001). Our protocol was useful in selecting suitable patients with ALD for liver transplantation, which resulted in significant survival advantage with low recidivism rate.
...
PMID:Liver transplantation for alcoholic liver disease: evaluation of a selection protocol. 918 71
Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis (SBP) is associated with an important production of inflammatory mediators. However, it is unknown whether there is a relationship between the abdominal production of these mediators and the development of renal impairment, one of the most important prognostic parameters in spontaneous
bacterial peritonitis
. We studied 52 cirrhotic patients at diagnosis and resolution of the infection, by measuring endotoxin, tumor necrosis factor (TNF), and interleukin-6 (IL-6) levels in plasma and ascitic fluid. Thirteen patients (25%) developed renal impairment. Patients developing renal impairment showed significantly higher plasma and ascitic fluid cytokine levels at diagnosis of infection than patients who did not (plasma TNF-alpha: 96.0+/-38.7 vs. 39.1+/-3.6 pg/mL, P=.0209; ascitic fluid TNF-alpha: 474.5+/-118.1 vs. 160.8+/-42.7 pg/mL, P=.0173; plasma IL-6: 6,635+/-2,897 vs. 458+/-109 pg/mL, P=.0004; ascitic fluid IL-6: 182,559+/-47,328 vs. 39,250+/-10,803 pg/mL, P=.0001). Independent predictors of development of renal impairment at diagnosis were: renal failure (blood
urea
nitrogen > 30 mg/dL or serum creatinine > 1.5 mg/dL) (P < .001), IL-6 levels in ascitic fluid (P < .001), and mean arterial pressure (P < .05). Ten of the 13 (77%) patients who developed renal impairment died during hospitalization, but only 2 of the 39 (5%) patients who did not (P=.0001). In addition, renal failure at diagnosis of the infection was the only independent predictor of hospital mortality (P < .001). In conclusion, the inflammatory response to the infection may be an important mechanism of renal impairment and the associated mortality in SBP.
...
PMID:Tumor necrosis factor and interleukin-6 in spontaneous bacterial peritonitis in cirrhosis: relationship with the development of renal impairment and mortality. 958 75
Acute appendicitis is a common surgical emergency in urban setting, of a developing country. The computerised hospital patient database at Aga Khan University Hospital, Karachi, was utilised to obtain records of all adults with a histologically proven diagnosis of acute appendicitis. A review of patients treated over a 18 month period was undertaken. One hundred and three appendicectomies were performed for acute appendicitis during this period. The diagnosis was clinical in all cases. Investigations like leucocyte count and lower abdominal ultrasound scan were used to improve diagnostic accuracy without a clear advantage. A number of routine investigations like, haemoglobin estimation and
urea
, creatinine, electrolyte measurements, did not provide additional information. The duration of antibiotic treatment in acute simple appendicitis was empiric and could be reduced to a single preoperative dose. Peritoneal fluid culture studies had a poor yield (26%) and results were not found to effect management in acute simple appendicitis. The routine use of Ampicillin in all cases of
bacterial peritonitis
needs re-evaluation, as a high incidence (73%) of resistance was seen. Studies to define the role and duration of treatment, with a single antibiotic, in acute simple appendicitis should be undertaken. Acute appendicitis is probably the most frequently considered surgical differential diagnosis at any hospital dealing with acute surgical conditions. The established treatment continues to be surgical removal of the inflamed organ. The diagnosis and decision to operate both are accepted to be based on clinical judgement, though a number of investigative manoeuvres have been described to reduce the negative appendicectomy rate. Other areas of debate are the number and length of antibiotic treatment and use of bacterial culture studies in cases of simple acute appendicitis. To analyse present practice and identify areas for study and change, a retrospective study was undertaken at Aga Khan University Hospital (AKUH), Karachi.
...
PMID:Appendicitis: a continuing challenge. 1006 19
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