Sepsis Sentence Examples

sepsis
  • Patients with severe sepsis or septic shock should be admitted to ICU or a high dependency unit.

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  • As mentioned above interferon gamma or molecules able to mimic or induce this cytokine may be of use in the treatment of sepsis.

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  • Success in treating human sepsis with a recombinant product indicates possible utility for EBOV HF.

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  • Acute adrenal insufficiency can occur after trauma, severe hypotension and sepsis.

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  • Pressure sores should be avoided as they prolong hospital stay, delay rehabilitation and may cause sepsis.

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  • If the baby survives birth it may develop sepsis and meningitis.

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  • She accepted that the readings should have alerted her to consider something more serious in the baby's condition, including sepsis.

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  • As the majority of Scottish patients with ARDS have sepsis this makes the applicability of the study results to our patient limited.

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  • The wound must be covered as quickly as possible to prevent sepsis, which is a constant threat to patients with burns.

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  • Two patients (4.5 %) died from neutropenic sepsis.

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  • The previous significant medical history of intra-abdominal sepsis was not taken into account.

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  • Objective 3. Samples of urine containing albumin fragments collected previously from children with meningococcal sepsis were remapped using SDS PAGE.

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  • The classical triad of pain, swelling and systemic sepsis is very commonly noticed.

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  • Antibiotic prophylaxis as practiced for the prevention of wound sepsis is more than adequate.

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  • The situation has not improved in 2002 with catheter sepsis rates being audited in only 32% of responding centers.

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  • In spreading gangrene, in which acute sepsis is present, and in which no line of demarcation forms, the best chance for the patient is promptly to amputate high up in sound tissues.

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  • The surgical procedure for the treatment of an open wound is - (r) arrest of haemorrhage; (2) cleansing of the wound and removal of any foreign bodies; (3) careful apposition of its edges and surfaces - the edges being best brought in contact by sutures of aseptic silk or catgut, the surfaces by carefully applied pressure; (4) free drainage, if necessary, to prevent accumulation either of blood or serous effusion; (5) avoidance of sepsis; (6) perfect rest of the part.

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  • She accepted that the readings should have alerted her to consider something more serious in the baby 's condition, including sepsis.

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  • However if infection disseminates in the blood, the widespread activation of phagocytes in the bloodstream initiates the sepsis response.

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  • We analyzed the test of clinical criteria for sepsis in all patients.

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  • Xigris is indicated for the treatment of adult patients with severe sepsis with multiple organ failure when added to best standard care.

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  • If large quantities of bacteria are present and begin circulating in the bloodstream, the child is in danger of developing an overwhelming systemic infection known as sepsis.

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  • The child has two or more deep-seated infections (meningitis, osteomyelitis, sepsis, or cellulitis).

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  • Postoperative complications are common, including wound infections and lack of healing, persistent sepsis and bowel necrosis, and a serious internal bleeding disorder known as disseminated intravascular coagulation.

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  • Streptococci, meningococci, and Haemophilus influenzae, organisms that cause diseases such as otitis media, sinusitis, pneumonia, meningitis, osteomyelitis, septic arthritis, and sepsis, all make capsules.

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  • In newborns, the most common cause of cardiopulmonary arrest is respiratory failure caused by sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS), airway obstruction (usually from inhalation of a foreign body), sepsis, neurologic disease, or drowning.

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  • Bacterial sepsis (the presence of illness-causing microorganisms, or their poisons, in the blood) is a potentially fatal illness in newborn infants.

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  • The signs of sepsis may include fever, fussiness, feeding problems, breathing difficulties, pale or mottled skin, or drowsiness.

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  • Untreated hemophilus infections-particularly meningitis, sepsis, and epiglottitis-have a high mortality rate.

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  • Bacterial sepsis of the newborn has a mortality rate of 13-50 percent.

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  • Sepsis is the most common initial diagnosis for actual infant botulism, and meningoencephalitis may also be the diagnosis if irritability and lethargy are present.

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  • Kwashiorkor-like secondary PEM usually develops in children who have been severely burned, suffered trauma, or had sepsis (massive tissue-destroying infection) or another life-threatening illness.

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  • Babies infected during the pregnancy usually have a blood infection (sepsis) and may have a serious, whole body infection called granulomatosis infantisepticum.

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  • Preemies are more likely to contract pneumonia, sepsis, and meningitis.

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  • Vitamin C also has antioxidant properties, defending against damaging free radicals generated during the inflammatory response, sepsis or stress.

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