Articles: sepsis.
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Comparative Study
Changes in plasma concentrations of vasoactive neuropeptides in patients with sepsis and septic shock.
The aim of this work was to study the hypothesis that the release of vasoactive neuropeptides may be related to the hemodynamic changes and severity of disease in human sepsis and septic shock. Twenty-two patients diagnosed with sepsis and treated in medical wards with standard supportive therapy and twenty patients admitted to a medical intensive care unit because of septic shock were studied Twenty healthy volunteers in a similar age range were enrolled as control group. Blood samples were taken at onset and every 12 hours on the following day after hospital admission to measure plasma concentrations of calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP), neuropeptide Y (NPY) and substance P (SP). ⋯ Our data suggest that both CGRP and NPY, but not SP, are increasedly released into the circulation during the development of human sepsis and septic shock. In patients with sepsis the vasoconstriction mediated by the release of NPY appears to counterbalance the vasodilatory effect of CGRP. In septic shock patients, however, the release of NPY might be inadequately low to overcome the widespread CGRP-induced vasodilation.
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Comparative Study
Severity of multiple organ failure (MOF) but not of sepsis correlates with irreversible platelet degranulation.
Multiple hemostatic changes occur in sepsis and multiple organ failure (MOF). To evaluate the role of platelets in patients with sepsis and MOF, we examined changes in surface glycoproteins on circulating platelets of 14 patients with suspected sepsis and MOF. The severity of sepsis and MOF was assessed by the Elebute and APACHE II scoring systems, respectively. ⋯ In contrast, degranulation of granule glycoproteins was significantly elevated in MOF (p < 0.05) which well with severity of MOF (GMP-140, r = 0.611, p = 0.013; TSP, r = 0.643, p = 0.026). We speculate that platelets in sepsis circulate in a hyperaggregable but still reversible state that results in increased risk of microthrombotic events. In the course of the disease, irreversible platelet degranulation of adhesion molecules occurs that may play an important role in the development of MOF.
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In hospital settings in Africa the many other concerns of sanitary officials and the lack of available resources often make hospital hygiene and nosocomial infection secondary problems. To illustrate the importance of these issues in an African pediatric setting, this report describes a series of 32 cases of nosocomial septicemia that occurred within a 2-month period in the Pediatric Department of Principal Hospital in Dakar. There were 10 deaths. ⋯ Klebsiella Pneumoniae was identified in 16 cases, Escherichia coli in 5, and an association of both bacteria in 5. A profile of beta-lactamase enzymes with a classic epidemiologic spectrum was observed in 15 of 21 strains of Klebsiella pneumoniae and in 3 of 10 strains of Escherichia coli. The authors discuss the conditions that may have encouraged the outbreak of septicemia, regret the lack of a service to monitor hospital hygiene, and propose prophylactic measures using laboratory tests that are feasible in a hospital setting in Africa.
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Critical care medicine · Jan 1995
Pentoxifylline does not prevent microvascular injury in normotensive, septic rats.
To determine if treatment with pentoxifylline would decrease the tissue injury that occurs in a normotensive model of sepsis. ⋯ Normotensive sepsis is accompanied by increased vascular permeability in the diaphragm and intra-abdominal organs. Pentoxifylline appears to attenuate some of the systemic manifestations of sepsis. However, pentoxifylline did not prevent the development of protein-rich tissue edema.
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Ann Fr Anesth Reanim · Jan 1995
Case Reports[Clostridium perfringens septicemia associated with foodborne toxic infection and abortion].
A 32-year-old pregnant woman with poor life and hygiene conditions presented with premature labour, fever and diarrhoea. After admission she gave birth to a stillborn child. ⋯ The outcome was favourable after an adapted antibiomicrobial therapy. This case illustrates the potential severity of Clostridium perfringens foodborne toxi-infection which can lead to abortion and septicaemia with massive haemolysis.