Immune system of African Americans responds more strongly to bacterial infection, and it is partly genetic

Immune system of African Americans responds more strongly to bacterial infection, and it is partly genetic

A Canada-US study has demonstrated that Americans of African descent have a stronger immune response to infection compared to Americans of European descent.... read more

Successful treatment with fecal microbiota transplantation in patients with multiple organ dysfunction syndrome and diarrhea following severe sepsis

Successful treatment with fecal microbiota transplantation in patients with multiple organ dysfunction syndrome and diarrhea following severe sepsis

The outcome of treating two patients with FMT indicates that restoration of the intestinal microbiota barrier can alleviate the infection and modulate the immune response.... read more

Empirical micafungin treatment doesn't improve survival

Empirical micafungin treatment doesn't improve survival

Empirical treatment with micafungin seems not to increase invasive fungal infection (IFI)-free survival at 28 days for patients with intensive care unit (ICU)-acquired sepsis with Candida colonization.... read more

New HIV treatment appears to have fully erased the virus from a patient's blood

New HIV treatment appears to have fully erased the virus from a patient's blood

A pioneering new trial offers new hope in the fight against HIV after a patient treated with a new therapy appears to have no trace of the virus in their blood.... read more

Vivantis Offers a Zika RT-qPCR Kit in Response to Virus Epidemic

In response to the need to fast detection of the virus, Vivantis, a leading manufacturer at the forefront of real-time PCR technology has developed the ViPrimePlus Zika Virus RT-qPCR kit.... read more

Bacterial molecule trains the immune system to tolerate infection without inducing illness

Bacterial molecule trains the immune system to tolerate infection without inducing illness

Pathogen infection has been considered to have one of two general outcomes - either the infected organism develops some level of illness or its immune system fights off and eliminates the invading pathogen.... read more

Adjunctive azithromycin reduces risk of non-elective cesarean post-operative infection: The C/SOAP trial

Adjunctive azithromycin reduces risk of non-elective cesarean post-operative infection: The C/SOAP trial

Women receiving azithromycin in addition to standard antibiotic prophylaxis for cesarean section (c-section) were 49% less likely to develop endometritis and postoperative wound infections compared to those who received only... read more

Hydrocortisone and Septic Shock in Patients With Severe Sepsis

Hydrocortisone and Septic Shock in Patients With Severe Sepsis

This randomized clinical trial compares the effects of hydrocortisone vs placebo on development of septic shock among intensive care patients with severe sepsis who were not in septic shock.... read more

Association of Sodium Selenite and Procalcitonin-Guided Therapy With Mortality

Association of Sodium Selenite and Procalcitonin-Guided Therapy With Mortality

This randomized clinical trial evaluates the use of high-dose sodium selenite, with or without use of a procalcitonin algorithm to guide therapy, and its association with mortality in patients with severe sepsis.... read more

Dysbiosis Across Multiple Body Sites in Critically Ill Adult Surgical Patients

Dysbiosis Across Multiple Body Sites in Critically Ill Adult Surgical Patients

Current evidence suggests that symbiosis of commensal microflora play a significant role in health and illness. The effect that commensal microflora play in critical care is less well known.... read more

HPV Vaccine More Effective Than Thought

HPV Vaccine More Effective Than Thought

The vaccine against human papillomavirus (HPV) infection, which doctors believe causes most cases of cervical cancer, appears even more effective than believed, a new study finds.... read more

Scientists reveal how signals from pathogenic bacteria reach danger sensors of cells

Scientists reveal how signals from pathogenic bacteria reach danger sensors of cells

Researchers at St. Jude Children's Research Hospital have discovered the way signals from infectious bacteria gain entry into the cytoplasm of host cells to activate disease-fighting inflammasomes. Inflammasomes are... read more

Polly Wanna Fever? Man’s Rare Infection Linked to Parrots

Polly Wanna Fever? Man’s Rare Infection Linked to Parrots

In the journal BMJ Case Reports, doctors describe the case of a 61-year old man with a number of pet birds who was diagnosed with parrot fever.... read more

Sentinel, a Next Generation Life-Saving Sepsis Alerting Solution

Sentinel, a Next Generation Life-Saving Sepsis Alerting Solution

Uniphy Health - a leader in mobile solutions for clinical collaboration and communications - today announced the wide-scale availability of its Sentinel sepsis alerting solution. Uniphy Sentinel is being deployed on the Uniphy... read more

Belgian scientists discover missing link in septic shock

Belgian scientists discover missing link in septic shock

Researchers at VIB and Ghent University have discovered an important mechanism of sepsis, an overreaction of the body’s immune system to an infection.... read more

Researchers tap Mayo, Christiana Care EHR data to fight sepsis

Researchers tap Mayo, Christiana Care EHR data to fight sepsis

In an effort to improve the diagnosis and treatment of sepsis, records data will be used to help understand how to beat the disease. ... read more

Feeding Tubes Require Initial and Ongoing Verification to Minimize Complications

Feeding Tubes Require Initial and Ongoing Verification to Minimize Complications

Bedside insertion of a feeding tube may be a common procedure, but poor placement is associated with complications ranging from aspiration to infection, injury and even death.... read more