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Query: UMLS:C0012739 (
disseminated intravascular coagulation
)
8,673
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Preoperative hemostatic data were obtained on 42
brain tumor
patients and correlated with the subsequent occurrence of venous thrombosis detected with 125I-labeled fibrinogen leg scans. The occurrence of thrombosis correlated significantly with an increased prothrombin time, plasminogen, and total fibrinolytic activity and a decreased fibrinogen level. This overall trend in the group of patients with postoperative thrombosis indicates that the hemostatic disorder noted in
brain tumor
patients is most closely related to a subclinical form of chronic
disseminated intravascular coagulation
syndrome. Differences in hemostatic parameters seen with the various types of brain tumors suggest that biological factors specific to each tumor are likely responsible for the described hemostatic disorder and support the need for further research directed at the tumor tissue level.
...
PMID:Postoperative venous thromboembolism and brain tumors: Part II. Hemostatic profile. 133 49
Three patients with abnormal hemostasis during surgery were reported. They were monitored by thrombelastography (TEG). The first case was a 48 year old male who underwent extravivo hepatectomy. TEG showed hypo-coagulability during anhepatic phase. After reperfusion to the liver, the coagulability determined by TEG returned to a normal pattern. The second patient was a 32 year old female who underwent laparotomy to stop bleeding for cervico-vaginal laceration after delivery. The patient had been in severe hemorrhagic shock, and massive blood transfusion and fluid administration were performed. TEG showed remarkable hypocoagulability probably due to blood dilution and
consumption coagulopathy
. When TEG returned to a normal pattern after administration of fresh frozen plasma and fresh whole blood, the abnormal bleeding stopped. The third patient was a 48 year old male who underwent resection of metastatic
brain tumor
. He had hepatocellular carcinoma and liver cirrhosis. During surgery, abnormal bleeding was seen at surgical field, when TEG revealed remarkable hyper-fibrinolysis. After antifibrinolytic therapy coupled with replacement therapy, TEG returned to a normal pattern and the abnormal bleeding ceased. We conclude that TEG is a useful bed side monitor for the diagnosis of coagulopathy and hyper-fibrinolysis during surgery.
...
PMID:[Thrombelastography as a bedside monitor of coagulation and fibrinolysis during surgery--a report of three cases]. 149 83
There have been numerous reported cases of diffuse intravascular coagulation (DIC) or
defibrination
syndrome associated with head trauma, but very few reported cases associated with primary
brain tumor
. This report concerns the findings in a case of DIC associated with
brain tumor
surgery in an infant. The patient died 2 days after surgery from acute renal and respiratory failure as a result of postoperative DIC. Therapy for DIC is controversial and shows mixed results.
...
PMID:Diffuse intravascular coagulation associated with brain tumor surgery in children. 213 10
Spontaneous extracranial metastases of glioblastoma multiforme in the absence of previous surgery have been rarely reported (Table 1). We presented an autopsy case of glioblastoma multiforme which spontaneously metastasized to the lungs, bronchial lymph nodes, liver, kidney, heart and spleen. A 68-year-old man was admitted to the Department of Neurosurgery at our hospital with chief complaints of right sided weakness in July 1984. He was well until November 1983, when he noticed weakness of right lower extremity followed one month later by the weakness in the right arm. He was treated at another hospital under the diagnosis of cerebral infarction, but his right sided weakness gradually progressed. In June 1984, a diagnosis of
brain tumor
was made by the neurological findings and CT scan, and he was transferred to our hospital for further evaluation and treatment. Neurological examination revealed disorientation, bilateral papilledema, right hemiparesis, right hyperreflexia and right hemisensory disturbance. CT scan revealed abnormal low density area in the left fronto-parietal lobe (Fig. 1) with irregular enhanced lesions on contrast CT scan (Fig. 2). Chest x-ray showed abnormal shadow in the right middle and lower lobe (Fig. 3) and a diagnosis of pulmonary infarction was suspected. The clinical states of this patient took downhill course and he expired on July 13, 1984 by the complication of
disseminated intravascular coagulation
syndrome. The brain weight was 1400 gr. Dura mater and falx cerebri were tightly adherent to the left parietal lobe (Fig. 4). Primary
brain tumor
was found in the left fronto-parietal region. The tumor was poorly defined with necrosis and hemorrhage (Fig. 5).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Glioblastoma multiforme with extracranial metastases without previous surgery: demonstration of extracranial metastases by peroxidase antiperoxidase staining and clinicopathological study]. 282 54
A case of cryptococcosis simulating
brain tumor
was reviewed. A 66-year-old female was admitted to our hospital with chief complaint of vertigo, gait disturbance and dysarthria. These symptoms started about one year before admission and worsened. Vomiting and urinary incontinence appeared. Neurological examination revealed left cerebellar ataxia and dysarthria. In plain CT (computerized tomography) irregular ill-defined low density area was noted in the cerebellar vermis and bilateral cerebellar hemispheres. And slight ventricular dilatation was found. Irregular shape of ring-like enhancement corresponding to capsule and patchy or mottled enhancement inside the tumor were seen. Suboccipital craniectomy was performed and yellowish necrotic tumor with hard capsule was removed. Histological diagnosis was not neoplasm or tuberculoma. Postoperatively liver function progressively worsened. She died due to
disseminated intravascular coagulation
. Autopsy revealed typical liver cirrhosis without malignant change. 3.0 X 2.5 cm sized, slightly hard, yellowish lesion was found on upper part of cerebellar hemispheres. This had extremely necrotic tissue and a great number of cryptococcus neoformans were found. And other intracranial lesion was not confirmed. Finding of pulmonary cryptococcosis was not gained. Our case is very rare because of solitary cerebellar abscess and absence of meningitic episode or pulmonary cryptococcosis. There are three types of inflammation in cerebral cryptococcosis. The commonest manifestation is the meningitic type, the second mode is granulomatous lesion and the third and the least presentation is intracranial abscess formation. CT reveals various findings according to clinical stage. CT findings are those of meningitis, meningoencephalitis, granuloma and abscess. Cryptococcal granuloma or abscess often simulates brain abscess, glioma and metastatic
brain tumor
.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[A case of cerebral cryptococcosis, with special reference to computerized tomography findings]. 646 65
Disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC)
is an extremely rare complication during elective
brain tumor
surgery. We report the case of a life-threatening intraoperative hemorrhagic diathesis due to a fulminating
DIC
during the removal of a grade III parietooccipital astrocytoma in a patient with a history of three pulmonary embolisms. Intraoperatively, the patient required 13 U of blood, 9 U of fresh-frozen plasma, and 5.45 L of colloids and crystalloids (total volume infused during the procedure: 12.5 L). Bleeding persisted for 24 h and required further blood component therapy. Laboratory data support the diagnosis of
DIC
: decreased fibrinogen and platelet count, prolonged thrombin and prothrombin times, and the presence of fibrin monomers. With aggressive and swift treatment of the
DIC
, the patient survived with transient neurological worsening.
...
PMID:Life-threatening hemorrhagic diathesis due to disseminated intravascular coagulation during elective brain tumor surgery. 788 Dec 37
To study the morphological changes of anti-Fas antibody-mediated apoptosis in living U251-SP human glioma cells, we employed video-enhanced contrast differential interference contrast (VEC-DIC) microscopy. In our previous study, we investigated the susceptibility of human glioma cell lines to anti-Fas Immunoglobulin M (IgM) antibody. U251-SP cells express Fas antigen on their surface. The cells exposed to anti-Fas antibody underwent apoptotic cell death, as reported previously. In this study, morphological changes of apoptosis characterized by bleb formation, shrinkage of cells, and nuclear condensation were observed under VEC-
DIC
microscopy in U251-SP human glioma cells treated with anti-Fas antibody. These results demonstrate the usefulness of VEC-
DIC
microscopy to study the process of apoptotic cell death.
Brain Tumor
Pathol 1998
PMID:Video-enhanced microscopic visualization of apoptotic cell death caused by anti-Fas antibody in living human glioma cells. 987 59
Coagulation disorders are common in cancer patients. In patients with solid tumors, a low-grade activated coagulation can result in systemic and cerebral arterial or venous thrombosis. Cancer treatments may also contribute to this coagulopathy, which usually, but not exclusively, occurs in the setting of advanced malignant disease. There may be TIAs or cerebral infarctions. Because of the widespread distribution of cerebral thromboses, there may be a superimposed encephalopathy; sometimes this is the only sign. Concurrent systemic thrombosis is present in many patients and is a useful clue to the diagnosis. In cerebral venous occlusion, the initial symptom is usually a headache. Except for cerebral intravascular coagulation that is unassociated with NBTE, neuriomaging studies usually demonstrate one or more parenchymal infarctions. MRI or MRV may demonstrate venous thrombosis. The laboratory evidence of coagulopathy is difficult to distinguish from the asymptomatic coagulopathy that often accompanies advanced cancer, and the test results must be interpreted cautiously. NBTE can be diagnosed by transesophageal echocardiography. There is no established treatment for the thrombotic coagulopathy associated with cancer, but anticoagulation should be considered. In leukemia and lymphoma, the coagulopathy is typically acute
DIC
that can lead to systemic and brain hemorrhages. It is especially common in acute myelogenous leukemias. The clinical signs of cerebral hemorrhage are fulminant and may be fatal. The bleeding usually occurs in the brain or subdural compartment, and rarely in the subarachnoid space. The diagnosis can be suspected by the clinical setting and by systemic thrombosis or hemorrhage. It can be established by examination of the peripheral smear, the platelet count, and tests of coagulation function. Therapy of acute
DIC
is controversial and should be individualized for the clinical setting. Cerebrovascular disorders can complicate metastatic or primary tumor in the brain, skull, dura, or leptomeninges. The clinical signs of infarction are indistinguishable from other causes of stroke, except that tumor-related venous occlusion will usually first produce signs of increased intracranial pressure. The diagnosis of tumor-related infarction can usually be established by neuroimaging studies that show infarction and may show extracerebral sites of tumor. CSF examination is useful in diagnosing leptomeningeal metastasis. A search for lung or cardiac tumor should be performed when embolic tumor infarction is suspected. Primary or metastatic tumors in the brain or dura may hemorrhage, producing the initial clinical signs of the
brain tumor
or a change in chronic signs induced by the tumor. There are helpful clues to a neoplastic hemorrhage on brain CT or MRI scans. The brain hemorrhage may require evacuation and the underlying tumor will usually require additional antineoplastic treatment. Hyperleukocytosis (extreme elevation of the cell count) in acute myelogenous leukemia is a less common cause of brain hemorrhage in recent years because of improved methods to lower the cell count. Cerebral arterial or venous thrombosis is sometimes the result of cancer therapy. The attribution of thrombosis to chemotherapy in many published cases is only speculative, because carefully conducted prospective studies that include investigation for other thrombotic causes are not available. The best-known associations with thrombosis are L-asparaginase, which is typically used in the induction therapy of acute lymphocytic leukemia, and combination hormonal therapy and chemotherapy for breast cancer. Radiation to the head and neck, typically administered for head and neck epithelial cancers or lymphoma, may result in delayed carotid atherosclerosis. The distribution of stenosis or occlusion is within the radiation portal and is typically more extensive than is atherosclerosis that develops in the absence of radiation. Small clinical series suggest that surgical treatment is equally effective as in nonirradiated carotid atherosclerosis. In children, the cerebral vessels can be affected by brain radiation resulting in stenosis or occlusion. Brain hemorrhages can result from chemotherapy effects on the hemostatic system or a microangiopathic anemia. Hemorrhages from radiation-induced vascular abnormalities are rare. Opportunistic infections, especially fungal infections, can complicate cancer or its treatment. Septic cerebral emboli may result in focal cerebral signs, seizures, or encephalopathy. Sometimes there is an associated hemorrhagic vasculitis or cerebritis. Rarely, mycotic aneurysms may bleed. A high index of suspicion is needed to diagnose fungal infection because of the difficulty in culturing the organism from the blood or CSF. A clinician can usually establish the cause of stroke in the cancer patient by performing a careful review of the clinical setting--including the type and extent of cancer and the type of antineoplastic therapy--in which the stroke occurred. Systemic thrombosis, embolism, or hemorrhage can be a clue to the cause, and appropriate neuroimaging and coagulation studies to aid in the diagnosis are available. Therapy may ameliorate symptoms or prevent further episodes. The identification of one of these unusual stroke syndromes that leads to the diagnosis of an occult and treatable cancer can be particularly rewarding.
...
PMID:Cerebrovascular complications in cancer patients. 1269 Jun 49
The authors present a case of 68-year-old woman who underwent resection of a metastatic adenocarcinoma in the left parietooccipital area. The intraoperative course was uneventful; however, after closure of the scalp incision, increased bleeding from the suture line was noted. A computerized tomography scan that was performed immediately after operation revealed acute epidural hemorrhage with mass effect under the bone flap. The patient developed
disseminated intravascular coagulation
and immediate re-exploration was performed. This patient was successfully treated owing to early recognition of the condition and immediate treatment with transfusion. Neurosurgeons should be alert that hypercoagulabe state is common in cancer patients and consumptive coagulopathy can occur after resection of metastatic
brain tumor
.
...
PMID:Disseminated intravascular coagulation in a patient undergoing removal of metastatic brain tumor. 1911 73
Extraneural metastases from primary brain tumors are extremely rare. We present an autopsy case that displayed a very late and unique pattern of metastasis from an anaplastic oligodendroglioma. The patient was a 74-year-old woman who was disease free for 17 years after resection of the primary oligodendroglioma. She was subsequently admitted to a hospital for heart failure where her bone marrow was found to be completely infiltrated with tumor cells, eventually resulting in
disseminated intravascular coagulation
. The onset was like leukemia, but the "blast-like" cells were different from leukemic cells, and the diagnosis was difficult until autopsy. After her death, a review of her past medical history and comprehensive analysis of her primary
brain tumor
and aspiration biopsy/autopsy bone marrow samples with glial immunohistochemical markers, fluorescence in situ hybridization examination, and immunohistochemical/sequencing analyses of mutant IDH1 revealed the accurate diagnosis. The metastatic tumor in her bone marrow was finally diagnosed as bone metastasis from the primary anaplastic oligodendroglioma. Although metastatic oligodendroglioma is very rare, it should be noted that this condition displays a propensity for bone and bone marrow and can present with features similar to those of leukemia after a long latency period.
Brain Tumor
Pathol 2014 Apr
PMID:Leukemia-like onset of bone marrow metastasis from anaplastic oligodendroglioma after 17 years of dormancy: an autopsy case report. 2390 May 11
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