Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0012739 (disseminated intravascular coagulation)
8,673 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Strontium-89 is effective in the palliation of bone pain caused by skeletal metastases. Its primary side effect is mild thrombocytopenia that typically recovers in 3 or 4 months. Subclinical disseminated intravascular coagulation is reported to be present in approximately 10% to 20% of patients with advanced prostate cancer. These patients may be at increased risk for severe marrow depression after radionuclide therapy for bone pain palliation. This report describes a patient with painful bony metastases resulting from prostate carcinoma. He had a normal platelet count and no clinical evidence of a coagulation disorder at the time of strontium-89 therapy, and a severe disseminated intravascular coagulation developed and lead to death after treatment. A normal platelet count before strontium-89 therapy does not preclude subsequent disseminated intravascular coagulation, and we support the Society of Nuclear Medicine's bone pain treatment procedure guideline that patients referred for bone palliation should be screened for disseminated intravascular coagulation before therapy.
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PMID:Disseminated intravascular coagulation in a patient treated with strontium-89 for metastatic carcinoma of the prostate. 1055 66

Hemobilia is relatively rare among hemorrhages in the digestive tract, and hemobilia caused by tumors of the biliary tract is particularly rare. We treated a 74-year-old-man with undifferentiated carcinoma of the gallbladder presenting with hemobilia. During hospitalization for neurogenic bladder at the Department of Urology, he showed progressive anemia. Since hemorrhage in the digestive tract was suspected, endoscopy of the upper gastrointestinal tract was performed, and bleeding from the papilla of Vater was observed. On ultrasound examination, findings were indicative of cholecystic cancer, and hemorrhage from the cystic duct was found on percutaneous transhepatic cholangioscopy. On perioral cholecystoscopy, however, masses of coagulated blood were found only in the gallbladder. Abnormalities such as dense staining of tumors or extravasation were not found on angiography. The patient died of hepatic failure due to rapid invasion of the liver by the tumor, associated with biliary infection and disseminated intravascular coagulation. At autopsy, a nodal tumor was found in the gallbladder, and the cavity of the gallbladder was filled with coagulated masses of blood. Direct invasion of the tumor to the liver, diaphragm, and transverse colon was found. The histopathological diagnosis was undifferentiated carcinoma (pleomorphic large-cell type).
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PMID:A patient with undifferentiated carcinoma of gallbladder presenting with hemobilia. 1063 45

We found a microvascular endothelial abnormality in a biopsy specimen from the gastrocnemius muscle of a patient with gastric cancer, who had severe myalgia and angialgia in the calf region with the symptoms of thrombophlebitis. There were no definite findings of inflammatory myopathy in histochemical and immunohistochemical studies. Electron microscopic examination revealed the accumulation of abnormal mitochondria in the subsarcolemmal area, and a fair number of degenerating capillaries. Immunohistochemical analysis of procoagulant or anticoagulant factors revealed marked reduction of thrombomodulin (TM) expression on small vessels and capillaries. Although a reduction of TM on small vessels has been observed around perifascicular atrophic fibers in patients with dermatomyositis, histochemical findings of the present patient showed no perifascicular atrophy or severely degenerating fibers. These pathological findings in the patient may be related to a malignant neoplasm and may be one of the causes of disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC), which is the main complication of malignant neoplasms. Further studies are necessary to determine whether the reduction of TM on the small vessels and capillaries in skeletal muscle is a predictor of some severe condition such as DIC or a rare pathological finding in some special condition such as scirrhous carcinoma with thrombophlebitis.
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PMID:Microvascular endothelial abnormality in skeletal muscle from a patient with gastric cancer without dermatomyositis. 1107 26

Humoral hypercalcemia caused by parathyroid hormone-related peptide (PTHrP), associated with cholangiocellular carcinoma (CCC), has rarely been documented. There have been no reports of CCC associated with extensive calcification of the tumor with psammoma body formation. A 66-year-old man was admitted with a large calcified tumor in the liver detected on an abdominal X-ray. An ultrasound-guided fine needle biopsy specimen of the liver tumor showed evidence of adenocarcinoma. He had hypercalcemia with an elevated PTHrP level. The patient died because of disseminated intravascular coagulation and progressive hepatic failure. A postmortem examination revealed a large poorly differentiated CCC in the liver. Immunohistochemical examination showed the presence of PTHrP-positive tumor cells. The calcified lesion consisted of a number of accumulated psammoma bodies. We present a case of PTHrP producing CCC with a marked psammoma formation.
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PMID:Parathyroid hormone-related peptide producing cholangiocellular carcinoma with a marked psammoma formation. 1119 58

We analyzed 143 cases of skull base surgery collected from the eight institutions of the Study Group supported by the Grant-in-Aid for Cancer Research from the Ministry of Health and Welfare of Japan. Histologically, the most common type was squamous cell carcinoma (n = 78), which was followed by olfactory neuroblastoma (n = 16) and adenoid cystic carcinoma (n = 16). The most frequent surgical approach was frontal craniotomy (n = 66), followed by front-temporal craniotomy (n = 54) and infratemporal fossa approach (n = 8). For repair of dura matter, fascia lata was used in 37 cases. galeopericranial flap in 35 and temporal muscle fascia in 16. The 5-year survival rate by Kaplan-Meier method of nose and paranasal sinus carcinoma (n = 119) was 48%. As for histological classification, the survival rates were both 65%) in adenoid cystic carcinoma (n = 12) and bone soft tissue malignancy (n = 10), 62% in olfactory neuroblastoma (n = 16), 46% in squamous cell carcinoma (n = 62) and 33% in adenocarcinoma (n = 11). All the three cases of malignant melanoma died within 1 year, so we considered skull base surgery to be contraindicated for this disease. Complications were observed in 62 out of the 143 cases (43%); local infection was most frequent in 29 cases. liquorrhea in 18, abscess in 16, necrosis of the flap and meningitis in ten cases, DIC in four, rupture of the internal carotid artery in two and cerebral thrombosis in one. Death caused directly by surgery was in ten cases (7%). It is important that a multi-center registry be maintained to have a large enough database for comparison of results, and prognosis for each histological entity and further define the role of multidisciplinary treatment.
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PMID:Surgical results of skull base surgery for the treatment of head and neck malignancies involving skull base: multi-institutional studies on 143 cases in Japan. 1168 48

Consumptive coagulopathy resulting in a disseminated intravascular coagulation is most often seen in infectious diseases and hematologic malignancies. Solid tumors may be associated with disseminated intravascular coagulation that results in gangrene of the upper extremity. A case report of lower-extremity gangrene as the pathology for gastric carcinoma is presented. The need for a multidisciplinary approach to this clinical presentation is noted.
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PMID:Pedal gangrene secondary to disseminated intravascular coagulation with gastric carcinoma. 1190 27

Retroperitoneal fibrosis (Ormond's disease) is rare chronic inflammatory process, that can occur at any age. It is characterised by development of periaortic fibrous mass leading to progressive obstruction of vessels around the abdominal aorta and ureters. In the one third of cases we can find the causes of disease. There are ergotamine abuse, radiation, retroperitoneal surgery or hemorrhage, urine extravasation and response to different cancers. The other cases are idiopathic disease. We report a case of prostate cancer with unique course. The first manifestations of disease were diffuse peritoneal fibrosis and ureteral obstruction leading to bilateral hydronephrosis. Clinical course and histopathology showed idiopathic Ormond's fibrosis. Patient received oral immunosuppressive treatment (prednisolone 1 mg/kg/day + azathioprine 1 mg/kg/day), followed by intravenous methylprednisolone puls (2 g). Treatment also consisted of DJ-stent placement on the left side. On the right side we were unable to overcome the obstruction of ureter. Because of persistent renal failure, thrombocytopenia, DIC and progressive lower back pain we did control MR and CT scan. The CT scans showed multiple osteolytic bone metastases in vertebral column (the sizes of them were between a few millimetres and 1.5 centimetre). Patient died due to renal failure and haemorrhagic diathesis in the course of disseminated cancer of unknown origin. The postmortem examination revealed diffuse peritoneal infiltration surrounding the ureters, intramural ventricular metastases, pulmonary metastases and vertebral metastases. The prostate was only slightly enlarged. Histological and immunohistochemical examinations of prostate showed primary low-differentiated prostate carcinoma (CK/+/, PAP/+/, PSA/+/). Peritoneal, ventricular and bone infiltrations also were metastases from low-differentiated carcinoma of prostate origin (CK/+/, PAP/+/, PSA/-/).
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PMID:[Ormond's fibrosis, bone osteolysis and stomach intramural metastases in the course f low-differentiated prostatic cancer]. 1192 71

We report a case of advanced gastric cancer complicated by disseminated intravascular coagulation successfully treated with chemotherapy consisting of 5-fluorouracil and cisplatin. The patient was a 53-year-old woman who complained of loss of appetite, weight loss, and low back pain. Based on the laboratory data, a diagnosis of disseminated intravascular coagulation was made. Gastroscopy revealed gastric carcinoma (Borrmann type 3) that was continuously bleeding, and chest computed tomography showed a solitary lung metastasis and bilateral pleural effusion. Bone scintigraphy revealed multiple bone metastases. Accordingly, we made a diagnosis of stage IV gastric cancer complicated by disseminated intravascular coagulation. We selected the 5-fluorouracil and cisplatin combination chemotherapy for treatment and obtained the patient's consent. After two cycles of the 5-fluorouracil and cisplatin therapy, the bleeding symptoms improved and the disseminated intravascular coagulation process was successfully controlled. We concluded that disseminated intravascular coagulation caused by gastric cancer may be improved when the primary cancer and its metastases are brought under control by treatment with FP combination chemotherapy.
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PMID:Advanced gastric cancer associated with DIC successfully treated with 5-FU and cisplatin: a case report. 1194 41

Disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) revealing a prostatic adenocarcinoma is rare. Most of the case are limited to biological abnormalities. We report a case of a 73 year old man with metastatic prostatic carcinoma and CIVD. The patient consulted for epistaxis and ecchymosis with thrombocytopenia and low coagulate factors. The prostatic specific antigen was 2200 ng/ml and fine needle aspiration of bone marrow biopsy detected metastatic cells. The patients received hormonotherapy, heparine and antithrombine III with a good follow up. About this case, we discuss the management of the patient with metastatic prostatic cancer and CIVD.
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PMID:[Prostatic adenocarcinoma revealed by disseminated intravascular coagulation and fibrinolysis]. 1216 93

An autopsy case of sepsis following radiofrequency ablation (RFA) for metastatic liver carcinoma after bile duct reconstructive operation is reported. A 72-year-old man underwent pylorus-preserving pancreaticoduodenectomy and reconstruction with the Suzuki-method (PD-III) for extrahepatic bile duct cancer in October 1998. A metastatic lesion was recognized in the liver (S3) in November 2001. Percutaneous RFA was performed for a recurrent lesion. A metastatic lesion was recognized again in the same segment in February 2002. Percutaneous RFA was performed again on February 26 and March 12. The patient was discharged without hemorrhage, infection, or hepatic failure on March 22. He complained of general fatigue on March 26. He was diagnosed with liver abscess, sepsis, acute renal failure, and disseminated intravascular coagulation, and received intensive care, but died on April 1. The autopsy revealed liver necrotic abscess at the RFA locus and multiple microabscesses of the liver, heart, and kidney.
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PMID:[An autopsy case of sepsis following radiofrequency ablation (RFA) for metastatic liver carcinoma after bile duct reconstruction]. 1248 45


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