Disease | septicemia |
Phenotype | C0032285|pneumoniae |
Sentences | 9 |
PubMedID- 24499503 | One splenectomized adult, who did not receive igg replacement, died from s. pneumoniae pneumonia with sepsis 4 months after rituximab treatment, underscoring the importance of addressing the potential development of severe hypogammaglobulinemia in patients with cvid treated with rituximab. |
PubMedID- 23837936 | pneumoniae liver abscess leading to sepsis and generalized pustules, complicated by cutaneous leucocytoclastic vasculitis. |
PubMedID- 21067543 | Another good example is streptococcus pneumoniae, a major cause of sepsis, pneumonia, and meningitis [13][14]. |
PubMedID- 24401906 | Wild-type (wt), epcr knockout (ko) and tie2-epcr mice, which overexpress epcr on the endothelium, were infected intranasally (pneumonia) or intravenously (sepsis) with viable streptococcus pneumoniae and euthanised at 24 or 48 hours after initiation of the infection for analyses. |
PubMedID- 24618837 | Exclusion criteria were similar to the initial study [10] and included previous anaphylactic reactions to any vaccine or vaccine-related component, bleeding diathesis, culture proven sepsis with s. pneumoniae, any serious or chronic ill health (including immunodeficiency), receipt of blood products, participation in another investigational study, and the receipt of further doses of pneumococcal vaccines since the initial study. |
PubMedID- 23166572 | During icu stay, he developed a sepsis with klebsiella pneumoniae and pseudomonas aeruginosa and there was a period of multi-organ failure. |
PubMedID- 26137078 | The present study reports a case of a patient that suffered from splenic abscess secondary to septicemia resulting from klebsiella pneumoniae infection following the removal of the feeding jejunostomy tube that was utilized subsequent to the patient undergoing total gastrectomy as part of the treatment regimen for gastric adenocarcinoma. |
PubMedID- 25676900 | Postmortem culture and genotyping analyses allowed us to identify klebsiella pneumoniae as the cause of sepsis, revealing the inadequateness of antimicrobial therapy. |
PubMedID- 23724337 | Other bacteria where biofilms and sialic acids might be important to infection include pseudomonas aeruginosa, an environmental opportunist, and s. pneumoniae, an important cause of ear infections, meningitis, septicemia, and pneumonia in especially young, old or immunocompromised human beings. |
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