Detection of Endotoxin in the Blood of Patients with Sepsis Due to Gram-Negative Bacteria
- 10 December 1970
- journal article
- Published by Massachusetts Medical Society in New England Journal of Medicine
- Vol. 283 (24) , 1313-1316
- https://doi.org/10.1056/nejm197012102832404
Abstract
A test for endotoxin was performed on the blood of 98 patients in whom septicemia due to gram-negative bacteria was suspected. The method was derived from a previous observation that endotoxin causes gelation of lysates of Limulus polyphemus amebocytes in vitro. Seventeen per cent of the patients studied had endotoxemia, as defined by this test. There was a good correlation between positive tests for endotoxin and bacteremia due to gram-negative organisms. Patients with pneumococcal pneumonia and bacteremia due to gram-positive organisms had negative tests. Endotoxin or endotoxin-like material was detected in the blood in concentrations from approximately 0.005 to 0.0005 μg per milliliter. Our data indicate that the limulus test is a sensitive, reliable and practical method for the detection of endotoxemia.Keywords
This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Use of a Bioassay for Endotoxin in Clinical InfectionsThe Journal of Infectious Diseases, 1970
- Gram-Negative Sepsis: Another Piece of the MosaicNew England Journal of Medicine, 1969
- Comparative Pyrogenic Reactivity of Rabbit and Man to Bacterial EndotoxinExperimental Biology and Medicine, 1969
- QUANTITATIVE ASPECTS OF THE RELEASE OF LEUKOCYTE PYROGEN FROM RABBIT BLOOD INCUBATED WITH ENDOTOXINThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1967
- THE INACTIVATION OF ENDOTOXIN AFTER INTERACTION WITH CERTAIN PROTEINS OF NORMAL SERUM*Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1966
- Bacterial EndotoxemiaAnnual Review of Medicine, 1965
- The Shwartzman Reaction: Pathogenetic Mechanisms and Clinical ManifestationsAnnual Review of Medicine, 1965
- Endotoxin-like Activity of Serum from Patients with Severe Localized InfectionsNew England Journal of Medicine, 1964
- The Endotoxins of Gram-Negative Bacteria and Host ResistanceNew England Journal of Medicine, 1961
- Pyrexia in rabbits following the injection of filtrates of typical mold culturesJournal of the American Pharmaceutical Association (Scientific ed.), 1950