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PedAM

Pediatric Disease Annotations & Medicines




Disease septicemia
Phenotype C0014118|endocarditis
Sentences 9
PubMedID- 22957282 Our patient, an hiv-negative intravenous drug user, had mycobacterium fortuitum sepsis associated with infective endocarditis, septic pulmonary emboli, and granulomatous hepatitis.
PubMedID- 25869076 A fatal case of native aortic valve infectious endocarditis with septicemia due to bcg in a patient treated with intravesical instillation is reported herein.
PubMedID- 21097741 Vaginalis septicaemia with infective endocarditis and septic emboli in the kidney and brain of an adult male.
PubMedID- 24006007 Culture-negative prosthetic valve endocarditis with concomitant septicemia due to a nontoxigenic corynebacterium diphtheriae biotype gravis isolate in a patient with multiple risk factors.
PubMedID- 26198736 E. rhusiopathiae was first recognized as a human pathogen causing localized cutaneous lesions, called erysipeloid, and sporadic cases of generalized cutaneous forms or septicaemia, often associated with endocarditis [2,5].
PubMedID- 23097670 The incidence of staphylococcal endocarditis as a cause of staphylococcal sepsis is less than 5 percent but 30 day mortality is as high as 11.8 to 23.9 percent [4].
PubMedID- 26269014 Eight patients died, in which 2 died of respiratory failure, 2 died of bacterial endocarditis with septicemia, 2 died of renal failure, 1 died of intraoperative bleeding leading to brain death and the 1 died of heart failure.
PubMedID- 25002776 The first human case was reported in 1962 in a case of septicemia with endocarditis,[6] followed by a case of aortic graft infection in 1994,[7] a case of a respiratory infection in 1998,[8] a case of septicemia in 2003[9] and recently in 2012[1] a case of pneumonia and septicemia in a 7-month-old male from rural area.
PubMedID- 26015797 The patient was found to have sepsis without endocarditis caused by e rhusiopathiae, associated with bronchopneumonia that was induced by a double gram-negative infection.

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