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PedAM

Pediatric Disease Annotations & Medicines




Disease septicemia
Phenotype C0011847|diabetes
Sentences 22
PubMedID- 22189003 As the authors point out, the higher incidence of sepsis in patients with diabetes mellitus may imply a protective effect.
PubMedID- 23847709 Here, we present a patient with multiple myeloma and secondary diabetes complicated by septicemia and central nervous system involvement caused by listeria monocytogenes.
PubMedID- 26312079 Metabolic management and tight glycemia control during surgery has a significant impact on the risk of infectious complications including wound infection, urinary tract infection, and sepsis in patients with diabetes across a variety of surgical procedures [17].
PubMedID- PMC4608143 She concluded that both type 1 diabetes and t2dm with sepsis show an important link of nf-κb and stat1 activation promoting idc and m1 macrophage polarization, resulting in cytotoxic and inflammatory functions that may also promote herv-w env protein expression.
PubMedID- 26020231 The risk of acute kidney injury (aki) during life-threatening events such as sepsis is increased in patients with diabetes, even those with the milder stages of ckd manifesting as small decreases in the glomerular filtration rate (gfr) [5].
PubMedID- 22446175 The proposed biological mechanisms that favor diabetes during sepsis or critical illnesses include the anti-inflammatory effect of some antidiabetic agents (such as insulin (33) and troglitazone) (34), a less disturbed hemostatic balance (29), an adaptation to hyperglycemia (31), and a protective effect of a higher bmi in diabetic patients (35).
PubMedID- 24669295 However, we note that in some specific conditions, both may dissociate, for example, in sepsis [7] and in patients with type 2 diabetes [8].
PubMedID- 23236389 Our results also show that 15.55% of diabetes group with severe sepsis underwent hemodialysis; this is much higher than the rate of 7.24% found for non-diabetic subjects (p<0.0001).
PubMedID- 26175689 Contrary to the above mentioned pathologies (heart failure, osa, diabetes), during sepsis, activation of the cb appears to be helpful in the inflammatory process since it will induce corticoid release by the adrenal gland in a mechanism linked to an increase in sympathetic outflow.
PubMedID- 25885234 Exclusion criteria included unwilling patients, general contraindications for epidural anesthesia, disorders of homeostasis or thoracic spine abnormalities, displaying signs and symptoms of systemic infection or patients having local sepsis or those with diabetes mellitus, hypertension, ischemic heart disease, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and other major systemic illness, history of allergy to the study medications, renal insufficiency or liver dysfunction.
PubMedID- 24895226 Thus, diabetes associated with sepsis exacerbates brain damage resulting from inflammation and oxidative stress in brain.
PubMedID- 20486843 The effects of polymicrobial sepsis with diabetes mellitus on kidney tissues in ovariectomized rats.
PubMedID- 23990518 Compared with nondiabetic control patients (table 2), patients with diabetes showed higher risks of postoperative complications, including septicemia (or 2.76 [95% ci 2.50–3.04]), pneumonia (1.88 [1.65–2.14]), stroke (1.70 [1.49–1.94]), acute renal failure (3.59 [2.88–4.48]), deep wound infection (1.33 [1.04–1.70]), acute myocardial infarction (3.65 [2.43–5.49]), and overall complications (2.42 [2.26–2.60]).
PubMedID- 26286815 Prevalence of diabetes mellitus in patients with sepsis-triggered takotsubo syndrome.
PubMedID- 24782168 The aim of this study was to analyze the clinical characteristics of diabetes mellitus patients with burkholderia pseudomallei septicemia and evaluate strategies of diagnosis and treatment.
PubMedID- 21756350 diabetes increases the risk of developing severe sepsis, with one study reporting a 2.5-fold increased risk for hospitalization with sepsis in diabetic individuals compared to the general population [110].
PubMedID- 24804698 The ors of postfracture deep wound infection, septicemia, and mortality associated with diabetes were 1.34 (95% ci 1.06-1.71), 1.42 (95% ci 1.23-1.64), and 1.27 (95% ci 1.02-1.60), respectively.
PubMedID- PMC3290189 From 01.01.2004 to 31.12.2008, 100 patients (average age 74.5 ± 7.3) affected by insulin dependent diabetes complicated by sepsis and abscess of the lower limb were treated in emergency surgery.
PubMedID- 24508422 Risk factors independently associated with crbsi were diabetes mellitus, long duration of catheterization, sepsis at insertion and administration of one or more antibiotics before insertion.
PubMedID- 24524438 Lung abscess without sepsis in a patient with diabetes with refractory episodes of spontaneous hypoglycemia: a case report and review of the literature.
PubMedID- 21362712 Objective: to compare organ dysfunction, particularly respiratory dysfunction, between sepsis patients with and without diabetes mellitus in an asian population.
PubMedID- 19914033 Background: hyperglycemia is frequent in sepsis, even in patients without diabetes or impaired glucose metabolism.

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