Articles: sepsis.
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An outbreak of 12 cases of infection occurred over a 9-month period in a Regional Referral Neonatal Intensive Care Unit. The pathogen was a gentamicin- and multiply-resistant Klebsiella oxytoca (K55), of high virulence. Seven of 10 neonates with septicaemia died, the majority within 24 h of the onset of infection. ⋯ There is evidence to suggest that in one case the infecting organism was acquired from a contaminated blood gas analyser. It is necessary to use incompatibility grouping and restriction endonuclease digestion for complete characterization of plasmids and their molecular weights. However, the finding that each isolate examined carried the same five plasmids as judged by co-electrophoresis on agarose gels, and expressed the same extent and degree of transferable antibiotic resistance provides evidence to suggest that this outbreak was due to spread of a resistant clone of K. oxytoca (K55).
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Critical care medicine · Nov 1984
Sequential hemofiltration in nonoliguric high capillary permeability pulmonary edema of severe sepsis: preliminary report.
Five patients with nonoliguric adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) secondary to severe sepsis showed improved blood oxygenation after up to 36 h of conventional therapy and mechanical ventilation with optimal positive end-expiratory pressure. However, metabolic acidosis was unchanged, and blood urea had increased. Some patients showed hemodynamic signs of incipient heart failure. ⋯ Patients recovered from ARDS in spite of fluid accumulation. Mechanical ventilation was stopped up to 8.5 h after the last hemofiltration. We postulate that convective ultrafiltration clears the blood of circulating low- and middle-weight vasoactive molecules implicated in the development of high microvascular permeability acute pulmonary edema secondary to sepsis.
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Seventy-five episodes of bacteraemia or fungaemia related to indwelling temporary intravenous devices were assessed by the Infectious Diseases Unit of The Westmead Centre, to determine the quality of care of these devices. The estimated incidence of systemic sepsis was 1% for all central venous catheters inserted and 0.1% for all peripheral venous catheters inserted. ⋯ Staphylococcus aureus was the most common isolate (41%); antibiotic resistant Gram-negative rods were also common (38%). It is concluded that continued education of resident and nursing staff is essential to minimize the risk of intravenous catheter-related sepsis.
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The Journal of infection · Sep 1984
Case ReportsGranulomatous hepatitis in Yersinia enterocolitica bacteraemia.
Bacteraemia caused by Yersinia enterocolitica was associated in a 60-year-old diabetic man with right upper-quadrant abdominal tenderness and abnormal liver function tests. Biopsy of the liver demonstrated granulomas with acute necrosis. To the authors' knowledge, this is the first report of granuloma formation in the human liver associated with this infection. Yersinia enterocolitica should therefore be added to the list of organisms associated with granulomatous hepatitis in human beings.