Internal medicine
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Multicenter Study Observational Study
Steroid therapy for patients with septic shock: A multicenter observational study conducted in Japan.
Objective The Clinical Practice Guidelines for the Management of Sepsis and Septic Shock weakly recommend steroids for septic shock resistant to fluid resuscitation and vasopressors. This study aimed to describe the clinical practices for septic shock in the real world and to compare the association between the intermittent or continuous infusion of steroids and the prognosis. Methods This was a retrospective cohort study based on the AMOR-VENUS, in which Japanese intensive care unit (ICU) inpatients were enrolled between January and March 2018. ⋯ In the steroid group, hydrocortisone was used in 85.7%, the median daily dose was 192 mg, and the steroids were administered within 6 h of initiating vasopressor in 71.4%. The adjusted odds ratios of shock reversal on the 7th day and the ICU mortality for continuous versus intermittent infusion were 1.90 (95% confidence interval, 0.43-8.40) and 0.61 (0.10-3.85), respectively. Conclusion There was considerable variation in the criteria for the selection of patients and in the decision to use continuous or intermittent steroid infusion.
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A 78-year-old man with atherosclerosis was diagnosed with hepatocellular carcinoma by transfemoral angiography of the celiac and superior mesenteric arteries (SMA). After surgery, a serum examination revealed progressive renal failure with eosinophilia, leading to end-stage kidney disease, in addition to active gastric ulcers and pancreatitis. ⋯ Autopsy revealed that CCE involved the arterioles of multiple organs, and its distribution was anatomically consistent with the vascular territories of the celiac artery and SMA. CCE should therefore be considered in patients presenting with multiple types of tissue damage in the vascular territories after angiography.