Plasma and Whole Blood Exchange in Meningococcal Sepsis

The present study describes the effect of plasma exchange or whole blood exchange (PEBE) on the survival rate among patients with fulminant meningococcal sepsis and on the level of circulating endotoxin. Since 1989 all patients with meningococcal disease and hypotension who were admitted to our inte...

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Veröffentlicht in:Clinical infectious diseases 1992-09, Vol.15 (3), p.424-430
Hauptverfasser: van Deuren, Marcel, Santman, Frederik W., van Dalen, Roelof, Sauerwein, Robert W., Span, Lambert F. R., van der Meer, Jos W. M.
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container_end_page 430
container_issue 3
container_start_page 424
container_title Clinical infectious diseases
container_volume 15
creator van Deuren, Marcel
Santman, Frederik W.
van Dalen, Roelof
Sauerwein, Robert W.
Span, Lambert F. R.
van der Meer, Jos W. M.
description The present study describes the effect of plasma exchange or whole blood exchange (PEBE) on the survival rate among patients with fulminant meningococcal sepsis and on the level of circulating endotoxin. Since 1989 all patients with meningococcal disease and hypotension who were admitted to our intensive care unit were treated with PEBE. Results for our patients were compared with those for a historical control group conventionally treated between 1984 and 1989 (n=10; mortality rate, 60%); the expected mortality rate, which was based on the Niklasson prognostic score and was calculated for seven patients in this control group, was 73%. A total of 15 patients were treated with PEBE, three (20%) of whom died, whereas the prognostic score (calculated for 14 patients) for this group was 62%. In two of the fatal cases, PEBE was started after a delay of ⩾40 hours. In the remaining 13 patients, PEBE was started within 5–30 hours after the first hospital admission. The mortality rate among this group was 8% (one of 13 patients); this rate was significantly different from that among the control group (P= .025). For seven patients treated with PEBE, plasma endotoxin concentrations were sequentially measured. The overall half-life (± SEM) of endotoxin was 181 ± 18 minutes. This is approximately the same as reported values for patients who were not treated with PEBE. It is concluded that early initiation of PEBE may improve the rate of survival among patients with meningococcal infection and hypotension but that the mechanism of the beneficial effect is most likely not based on the elimination of endotoxin.
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source Jstor Complete Legacy; MEDLINE; Oxford University Press Journals Digital Archive Legacy
subjects Adolescent
Adult
Blood
Blood plasma
Child
Child, Preschool
Children
Clinical Infectious Disease Articles
Endotoxins
Endotoxins - blood
Exchange Transfusion, Whole Blood
Female
Hospital admissions
Humans
Hypotension
Infant
Intensive care units
Leukocytes
Male
Meningococcal Infections - therapy
Mortality
Neisseria meningitidis
Plasma Exchange
Prognosis
Sepsis
Shock, Septic - microbiology
Shock, Septic - therapy
title Plasma and Whole Blood Exchange in Meningococcal Sepsis
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