Articles: sepsis.
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Pathologie-biologie · Sep 1988
[Initial antibacterial prophylaxis after bone marrow allograft. Pilot study with systemic vancomycin].
In 22 consecutive patients treated by allogenic bone marrow transplantation, the authors report their experience in complete gastrointestinal decontamination and prophylactic systemic vancomycin. Neither septicemia from the low digestive tract nor with Gram positive is noticed. A child developed septicemia with Capnocytophaga ochracea, resistant to vancomycin. There is no infectious death in this study and no significative toxicity is reported.
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Comparative Study
Activation of the contact system of plasma proteolysis in the adult respiratory distress syndrome.
Adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) is a complex pulmonary clinicopathologic condition associated with pulmonary endothelial injury and blood coagulation activation. In patients with ARDS from all causes, factor VII levels were significantly reduced. Patients with ARDS caused by sepsis had more evidence of intravascular coagulation and fibrinolysis than did patients with trauma-related ARDS by having significantly (p less than or equal to 0.05) increased prothrombin times, activated partial thromboplastin times, and fibrin degradation products, and decreased antithrombin III concentration. ⋯ These findings showed that the proteins of the contact system were more extensively activated in ARDS than were the proteins that contribute to later reactions in intravascular coagulation and fibrinolysis. Activation of the contact system proteins could be the result of endothelial injury occurring as part of ARDS. Intravascular coagulation and fibrinolysis in patients with ARDS also arise from components independent from contact system activation.
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Am. Rev. Respir. Dis. · Aug 1988
Attenuation of acute lung injury in septic guinea pigs by pentoxifylline.
Pentoxifylline (PTXF), a drug demonstrated to improve intermittent claudication, is a methylxanthine that increases intracellular cyclic AMP (cAMP) and, unlike theophylline, has few side effects. Because increased cAMP levels have been associated with a decrease in lung injury, we examined the effects of PTXF on acute lung injury in a septic guinea pig model. Five groups of guinea pigs were studied over a period of 8 h. (Group I: saline control injected intravenously with 2 ml of saline; Group II: septic control injected intravenously with 2 x 10(9) Escherichia coli; Group III: E. coli septicemia plus PTXF bolus 20 mg/kg injected 5 min before E. coli injection; Group IV: E. coli septicemia plus PTXF continuous infusion, begun with bolus [20 mg/kg] followed by continuous infusion [20 mg/kg/h] started 60 min before injection of E. coli; Group V: PTXF continuous infusion [20 mg/kg/h] control). ⋯ Lung water (wet-to-dry ratio), the concentration ratio of 125I-labeled albumin in bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) fluid to that in plasma (albumin index; AI), total cell count in BAL fluid, thiobarbituric-acid-reactive material (TBARM), and the lysosomal enzyme beta-glucuronidase (beta-G) were examined. Lung tissue was studied histologically to assess neutrophil accumulation. Our results showed that E. coli septicemia caused significant peripheral neutropenia and histopathologic evidence of neutrophil alveolitis associated with an increased ratio of TBARM and beta-G in BAL fluid as compared with those in plasma (TBARM BAL ratio and beta-G BAL ratio).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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J. Thorac. Cardiovasc. Surg. · Jul 1988
Case ReportsAn outbreak of Pseudomonas cepacia bacteremia associated with a contaminated intra-aortic balloon pump.
In January 1983, symptomatic Pseudomonas cepacia bacteremia developed in two patients in the cardiothoracic intensive care unit within 3 days after cardiac operation and insertion of an intra-aortic balloon pump. An epidemiologic and microbiologic investigation revealed that both patients required intra-aortic balloon pumping for circulatory support and that the water reservoir of the intra-aortic balloon pump (SMEC, Inc., Cookeville, Tenn.) contained more than 10(5) Pseudomonas cepacia per milliliter. This organism was also recovered from the purge button and on-off switch of the pump and from the hands of a health care worker who manipulated the water reservoir of the intra-aortic balloon pump. ⋯ Transmission from the worker's hands to patients presumably occurred by inoculation of the intravascular lines during management. No additional cases of Pseudomonas cepacia bacteremia were observed after the unit was replaced with a nonwater reservior intra-aortic balloon pump. This report substantiates the ability of Pseudomonas cepacia to multiply in water and to cause epidemic bacteremia, identifies the water reservoir of the SMEC intra-aortic balloon pump as a previously unrecognized hazard for the patient requiring intra-aortic balloon pumping, and documents the value of plasmid analysis in elucidating the mode of transmission of nosocomial Pseudomonas cepacia infections.