Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0012739 (
disseminated intravascular coagulation
)
8,673
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Two elderly patients presented with symptoms suggestive of occult temporal arteritis. Both were treated with high doses of corticosteroids although subsequent biopsies of the arteries did not show evidence of arteritis. After 5 months of corticosteroid therapy, the first patient died of Gram-negative bacterial pneumonia and cystitis and
disseminated intravascular coagulation
. The second patient, six days after the biopsy, died of pneumococcal meningitis which had presumably spread from a focus about the left optic nerve. In the first patient, necropsy studies showed that the loss of vision appeared to be due to
arteriosclerosis
of the nutrient vessels of the optic nerve while in the second patient, the visual symptoms appeared to be due to a localized optic perineuritis. Corticosteroid therapy in elderly patients carries a high morbidity, as is illustrated by the first case and may mask unsuspected underlying disease processes, as presumably occurred in the second. We discuss the importance of obtaining a biopsy diagnostic of temporal arteritis in order to justify the continuation of corticosteroid therapy and the significance of a negative biopsy.
...
PMID:Complications of corticosteroid therapy in presumptive temporal arteritis. 107 27
In spite of a systemically increased clotting tendency in progredient
arteriosclerosis
there are locally restricted haemorrhagic sequelae following arterial vasoreconstruction. Because of the fact that each bleeding simultaneously includes the risk of wound infection with subsequent sepsis the formation of a haematoma is to be avoided in the surgical procedure. The development of
disseminated intravascular coagulation
caused by sepsis and that caused by massive haemorrhage are represented as to their clinical importance. Finally, an internationally accepted substitution concept for severe bleeding sequelae, e.g. in case of the rupture of an aortic aneurysm, is submitted.
...
PMID:[Disorders of blood coagulation during and after arterial vascular reconstruction]. 663 15
We have previously reported that the decrease in gastric mucosal blood flow (GMBF) and
consumption coagulopathy
(CC) mainly contribute to the development of postoperative bleeding in the upper gastrointestinal (GI) tract in patients with abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA). In the present study, we investigated whether our treatment for patients with low GMBF or CC effectively prevented postoperative gastric bleeding induced by gastric ulcer or acute gastric mucosal lesion. Preoperative endoscopic examinations in 66 patients with AAA and 60 patients with
arteriosclerosis
obliterance (ASO) revealed that 50.0% of AAA and 16.6% of ASO patients had accompanying gastric ulcer or multiple erosions. In 38 AAA and 36 ASO patients, GMBF was measured using a laser Doppler flowmeter through an endoscope. The GMBF was severely impaired in AAA patients and moderately impaired in ASO patients. The platelet counts and fibrinogen levels were significantly decreased in these 38 AAA patients compared with controls. Furthermore, fibrinogen degeneration product (FDP) levels in 36.8% of AAA patients were more than 20 micrograms/dl. Based on these findings, patients with low GMBF were treated postoperatively with H2-blocker, and patients with CC were treated preoperatively with heparin. After these treatments, only 1 of 38 AAA patients developed postoperative upper GI tract bleeding and could be treated conservatively after 1988, whereas in prior years postoperative upper GI tract bleeding developed in 7 of 112 patients, three of whom required emergency surgery.
...
PMID:Prevention of gastric ulcer or acute gastric mucosal lesions accompanying bleeding after abdominal aortic aneurysm surgery. 784 24
Monocytes/macrophages and endothelial cells express tissue factor (TF), an initiator for blood clotting pathway, following their activation accompanied by immune response and/or inflammation. This TF expression results in thrombin generation and fibrin formation around these cells and possibly participates in host-defense mechanism. TF expression by these cells is also a risk-factor to vascular diseases including
arteriosclerosis
and thrombosis. In cancer and leukemia patients elevation of their plasma TF level associated with
DIC
and related coagulation disorders.
...
PMID:[Current scopes on tissue factor: its physiological function and relationship with coagulation diseases]. 802 93
Gene therapy is a method for treating hereditary disease at the gene level. In this paper, I show recent gene therapy approaches for cancer, hemophilia and
arteriosclerosis
obliterans, and gene medical supply including antisense and decoys are also introduced. With the rapid advances in gene therapy research, the case of dying gene therapy using the adenovirus vector was reported due to
DIC
. Establishment of the safety in the gene therapy and solution of the ethics problems are also important issues.
...
PMID:[Gene therapy]. 1265 11
Extremity gangrene is a fairly common pathology, which complicates systemic vascular and endocrine diseases. Most often, it is encountered in diseases like uncontrolled Diabetes Mellitus, presenting as diabetic foot gangrene, severe peripheral
arteriosclerosis
with gangrene of the extremity complicating severe uncontrolled systemic hypertension and meningococcal septicaemia with peripheral gangrene. It also occurs in some cases of snake bite as well as frost bite (in regions with extreme cold weather conditions). Some of them present as monolateral extremity gangrene. However, others present as bilateral symmetrical peripheral gangrene (SPG) characterized by bilateral extremity ischaemia resulting in gangrene in which there is no major vascular occlusive disease. There is
disseminated intravascular coagulation
with the gangrene being considered as a cutaneous marker and some of the patients that survive ultimately require amputation of the affected limb(s) in the severe cases. The mild cases end up losing some of the digits or just exfoliation of the dead cutaneous layer. The effects are generally more severe in the lower limbs than in upper limbs. Notable among these are some of those complicating meningococcal sepsis resulting from peripheral intravascular coagulation. We present here, five patients who presented with varying degrees of peripheral gangrene during an epidemic of meningitis and the treatments that were carried out depending on the severity of their cases.
...
PMID:Peripheral Gangrene and Extremity Amputations - Painful Preventable Sequelae of Meningococcal Septicaemia: Case Series Reports. 3215 Jun 39
This is a report of an atypical presentation of COVID-19. The patient had sparse pulmonary symptoms despite characteristic COVID-19 lesions on CT-thorax and developed severe acral ischaemic change, after a few days of hospitalisation. The condition could not be explained by classical sepsis with hypotension and hypoperfusion,
disseminated intravascular coagulation
, vasculitis, endocarditis or severe peripheral
arteriosclerosis
. A skin biopsy showed microthrombosis, interpreted as an activation of the coagulation system associated with COVID-19. Apparently, there are multiple COVID-19 phenotypes.
...
PMID:[Acral ischaemia with multiple microthromboses and imminent gangrene in a 73-year-old woman with COVID-19]. 3258 60