1.Procalcitonin as a biomarker of infectious diseases.
The Korean Journal of Internal Medicine 2013;28(3):285-291
Traditional biomarkers, including C-reactive protein, leukocytes, erythrocyte sedimentation rate, and clinical signs and symptoms, are not sufficiently sensitive or specific enough to guide treatment decisions in infectious febrile diseases. Procalcitonin (PCT) is synthesized by a large number of tissues and organs in response to invasion by pathogenic bacteria, fungi, and some parasites. A growing body of evidence supports the use of PCT as a marker to improve the diagnosis of bacterial infections and to guide antibiotic therapy. Clinically, PCT levels may help guide the need for empirical antibiotic therapy, source control for infections, and duration of antibiotic therapy. The aim of this review is to summarize the current evidence for PCT in different infections and clinical settings, and to discuss the reliability of this marker in order to provide physicians with an overview of the potential for PCT to guide antibiotic therapy.
Algorithms
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Anti-Bacterial Agents/therapeutic use
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Bacterial Infections/*blood/drug therapy
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Biological Markers/blood
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Calcitonin/*blood
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Humans
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Protein Precursors/*blood
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Sepsis/*blood/drug therapy/microbiology
2.Effects of hydrocortisone on circulating and intramyocardial inflammatory mediators in severe septic rats with myocardial injury induced by Escherichia coli.
Yong-qing WANG ; Xun-mei FAN ; Tao ZHOU ; Yu-jie QI ; Hui CHEN ; Su-yun QIAN
Chinese Journal of Pediatrics 2006;44(2):131-135
OBJECTIVESevere sepsis and septic shock remain the most common cause of death in intensive care units. The main causes of death in sepsis are the cardiac dysfunction and hypotension resistant to cateolamines. The prevalence of relative adrenal insufficiency in severe sepsis and septic shock was estimated at about 32%-51%. Several meta-analysis demonstrated that high-dose glucocorticoids decreased survival during sepsis, while stress doses of corticosteroids may benefit these patients. The exact reason for such widely divergent outcome produced by different doses of corticosteroid is still not understood. Therefore, the study was undertaken to observe the effects of different doses of hydrocortisone (HC) on circulating and intramyocardial inflammatory mediators in severe septic rats with myocardial injury induced by Escherichia coli (E. coli).
METHODSThe model was established by two injections of inactivated E. coli Forty male Wistar rats were randomly divided into five groups: high-dose of HC group (150 mg/kg), medium-dose group (20 mg/kg), low-dose group (6 mg/kg), model group (NS substituted for HC), and control group (NS for E. coli and HC). Each group had eight rats. After 2 hours of treatment, specimens were collected to measure serum cardiac troponin I (cTnI), tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha), interleukin-1beta (IL-1beta), nitric oxide (NO) and total NO synthase (NOS). NO and total NOS in myocardial homogenate were also detected. The expression of inducible NOS (iNOS) of myocytes was investigated.
RESULTSAll the above-mentioned markers in model group significantly higher than those in control group. After HC injection, serum cTnI concentrations in low-dose group decreased to normal values compared to that of model group, while in another two HC groups, the concentrations were higher than those in model group. TNF-alpha level was not significantly influenced. But IL-1beta level declined to normal values, being prominent in low-dose HC group. Neither high-dose nor middle-dose HC could lower serum NO or total NOS, but low-dose HC could greatly inhibit both NO and NOS levels (P < 0.05). There was no significant difference in the level of NO and total NOS of myocardial homogenate between left and right ventricles. There was no iNOS expression by normal myocardium, while the expression in model group was significantly increased. After HC injection, the iNOS expressions by myocardium in three HC groups were weaker than those in model group. The intensity of iNOS signals became weak with the decrease in HC dose.
CONCLUSIONDifferent doses of HC might exert different effects on circulating and intramyocardial inflammatory mediators in severely septic rats with myocardial injury induced by E. coli. Low-dose HC could significantly inhibit such mediators as well as iNOS expression by cardiomyocytes. The results suggest that low dose HC exert protective effect on myocardial injury of severely septic rats.
Animals ; Anti-Inflammatory Agents ; administration & dosage ; pharmacology ; Cardiomyopathies ; drug therapy ; immunology ; metabolism ; Disease Models, Animal ; Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ; Escherichia coli ; pathogenicity ; Hydrocortisone ; administration & dosage ; pharmacology ; Interleukin-1beta ; blood ; Male ; Muscle Cells ; drug effects ; immunology ; metabolism ; Nitric Oxide ; blood ; metabolism ; Nitric Oxide Synthase ; metabolism ; Rats ; Rats, Wistar ; Sepsis ; drug therapy ; immunology ; microbiology ; Treatment Outcome ; Troponin I ; blood ; Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha ; blood
3.Sepsis and Meningitis due to Listeria Monocytogenes.
Orhan YILDIZ ; Bilgehan AYGEN ; Duygu ESEL ; Uner KAYABAS ; Emine ALP ; Bulent SUMERKAN ; Mehmet DOGANAY
Yonsei Medical Journal 2007;48(3):433-439
PURPOSE: This study focused on the effect of immuno-compromising conditions on the clinical presentation of severe listerial infection. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Nine human listeriosis cases seen from 1991-2002 were reviewed. All adult patients, from whose blood, peritoneal fluid or cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) the L. monocytogenes was isolated, were included in this retrospective study. RESULTS: Listeriosis presented as primary sepsis with positive blood cultures in 5 cases and meningitis with positive CSF cultures in 4 cases. All of these patients had at least one underlying disease, most commonly, hematologic malignancy, diabetes mellitus, amyloidosis and hepatic cirrhosis; 55.6% had received immunosuppressive or corticosteroid therapy within a week before the onset of listeriosis. The patients were adults with a mean age of 60 years. Fever, night sweats, chills and lethargy were the most common symptoms; high temperature (> 38 degrees C), tachycardia, meningeal signs and poor conditions in general were the most common findings on admission. The mortality rate was 33.3% and was strictly associated with the severity of the underlying disease. Mortality differences were significant between sepsis (20%) and meningitis (50%) patients. CONCLUSION: Listeriosis as an uncommon infection in our region and that immuno- suppressive therapy is an important pre-disposing factor of listeriosis. Sepsis and meningitis were more common in this group of patients and had the highest case-fatality rate for food-borne illnesses.
Adrenal Cortex Hormones/therapeutic use
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Adult
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Aged
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Ascitic Fluid/microbiology
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Female
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Humans
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Immunosuppressive Agents/*therapeutic use
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Listeria Infections/blood/cerebrospinal fluid/*drug therapy
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Listeria monocytogenes/*drug effects/growth & development/isolation & purification
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Male
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Meningitis, Bacterial/blood/cerebrospinal fluid/*drug therapy
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Middle Aged
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Retrospective Studies
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Sepsis/blood/cerebrospinal fluid/*drug therapy
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Treatment Outcome