Articles: sepsis.
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An American College of Chest Physicians/Society of Critical Care Medicine Consensus Conference was held in Northbrook in August 1991 with the goal of agreeing on a set of definitions that could be applied to patients with sepsis and its sequelae. New definitions were offered for some terms, while others were discarded. Broad definitions of sepsis and the systemic inflammatory response syndrome were proposed, along with detailed physiologic parameters by which a patient may be categorized. ⋯ The use of severity scoring methods when dealing with septic patients was recommended as an adjunctive tool to assess mortality. Appropriate methods and applications for the use and testing of new therapies were recommended. The use of these terms and techniques should assist clinicians and researchers who deal with sepsis and its sequelae.
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Although catheter-related sepsis (CRS) is an important cause of nosocomial infection and the major complication of intravenous catheter use, there is, as yet, no consensus concerning either a useful definition of CRS or the optimal method of catheter management and prevention of infection. Semiquantitative culture of catheter tips is a useful method of diagnosis of CRS but other techniques such as quantitative catheter blood cultures and Gram staining of the catheter have roles in selected patients. The most significant impact on the prevention of CRS is made by the introduction of an intravenous therapy team. ⋯ Techniques such as guide-wire exchange and catheters such as triple lumen and total implantable venous access devices have their own infection problems. Many new and interesting approaches to the prevention of CRS are being formulated. To facilitate further progress, a standardized definition for diagnosis, and revised recommendations for prevention of CRS would be helpful.
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Pulmonary arterial hypertension, defined as a mean pulmonary artery pressure exceeding 20 mmHg has been observed both in experimental animal and human sepsis, even before development of the adult respiratory distress syndrome. In this article we review several mechanisms that have been invoked for the pulmonary arterial hypertension associated with sepsis (and the adult respiratory distress syndrome): obstruction of the pulmonary microcirculation with microthrombi composed of platelets and leukocytes, and active pulmonary vasoconstriction induced by the autonomous nervous system, hypoxia or vasoactive humoral factors ("mediators"). Some of these mediators, in particular serotonin and arachidonic acid metabolites have been the subject of substantial research and therapeutic manipulation. Since pulmonary arterial hypertension imposes an increased afterload to the right ventricle and because right ventricular dysfunction appears to be a major determinant of the outcome of sepsis, the study of the mechanisms involved in pulmonary arterial hypertension may lead to improved management of sepsis and septic shock.
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Klinische Wochenschrift · Dec 1991
ReviewOxygen radicals--an important mediator of sepsis and septic shock.
There is considerable evidence to implicate aggressive species of oxygen in the pathogenesis of organ dysfunction consequent to sepsis and septic shock. The inflammatory process appears to participate ubiquitously in this setting. A characteristic of inflammation is the involvement of activated neutrophils and their generation of aggressive oxygen species. ⋯ For those reasons, the potential for antioxidants as therapy should include consideration of the volume of distribution of such substances. It is probably important that antioxidants access excluded spaces including cell interiors in order to have their maximum effect in this setting. We have studied ina preliminary way the effects of n-acetyl-cysteine, a highly permeable free radical scavenger and anti-oxidant, in patients with established ARDS.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)