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)

Tissue plasminogen activator (t-PA) in plasma obtained from patients with acute hepatitis, chronic hepatitis, liver cirrhosis, hepatocellular carcinoma, drug-induced intrahepatic cholestasis, obstructive jaundice, fulminant hepatitis or disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC), was analysed chromatographically. Liver disease cases showed a new peak (peak C) on HPLC fractionation. The protein of peak C had a lower molecular weight than ovalbumin. Lysine- and zinc- chelating affinity chromatography revealed that the peak C consist with the light chain (L-chain) of t-PA. The L-chain was also found in patients with DIC, but disappeared after improvement of DIC. Therefore, it was suggested that appearance of the L-chain would be related to acceleration of secondary fibrinolysis in plasma. The L-chain was especially high in plasma obtained from patients with decompensated liver cirrhosis. These results indicated that high increase of the L-chain in cases of severe liver disease may be due to either impaired clearance of t-PA in the liver or secondary hyperfibrinolysis accompanied by DIC. We concluded that determination of the L-chain of t-PA may contribute to clarify the mechanism of hyperfibrinolysis in liver diseases.
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PMID:[Qualitative analysis of tissue plasminogen activator in plasma obtained from various liver diseases by gel filtration and affinity chromatography]. 210 95

A study is presented of 159 patients with cholestatic forms of viral hepatitis and 82 patients with viral hepatitis showing no cholestasis. The disorders of the coagulation activity were found to be nonhomogeneous and depended on the clinical variant of viral hepatitis, the period and severity of the disease, premorbid background and ways of infection. It is emphasized that development of the syndrome of disseminated intravascular coagulation is characteristic of the most severe forms of hepatitis against the background of prolonged and maximal bile stasis as well as in viral hepatitis B. Use of heparine, contrical and antihemorrhagic drugs when indicated prevents or controls the DIC syndrome.
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PMID:[The hemostatic system and DIC syndrome in cholestatic forms of viral hepatitis]. 260 5

A 30-year-old woman in the 36th week of her second pregnancy, suddenly developed jaundice with remarkable liver necrosis, accompanied by generalized bleeding due to disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC). She underwent a caesarean and a dead foetus was extracted from the uterus. Heparin and frozen plasma infusion resulted in a prompt recovery from the haemostatic disorder. The course of the disease involved the successive appearance of haemorrhagic shock, intestinal ileus and pulmonary embolism all of which she recovered from. The liver biopsy showed severe cholestasis without derangement of the lobular structure. Hypotheses of acute veno-occlusive disease caused by the DIC, and acute fatty liver of pregnancy are discussed.
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PMID:[Disseminated intravascular coagulation and acute hepatic necrosis at the end of pregnancy. A case report]. 262 77

A 76-year-old female was admitted to the hospital with oral bleeding. Laboratory findings were suggestive of disseminated intravascular coagulation. An endoscopic cholangiography was performed in order to rule out a biliopancreatic tumor. A symmetrical stenosis of the lower part of common bile duct was observed. This extrinsic compression was due to a calcified abdominal aortic aneurysm. CT scan confirmed the close relation between the common bile duct and the aortic aneurysm. No cholestasis was described.
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PMID:Common bile duct compression by an abdominal aortic aneurysm. 395 42

Five cases of hepatic haemangioma are described, and a sixth (previously reported) is reviewed. Clinical features, investigation, and management are described to show the great variability of the complications and prognosis. Five children presented in the first 10 weeks of life with hepatomegaly; 4 developed congestive cardiac failure; 3 had cutaneous haemangiomata. One child presented at age 4 years with hepatomegaly and anaemia, and on investigation had features of chronic disseminated intravascular coagulation. Focal decrease or patchiness in hepatic uptake of technetium-99m colloid, and abnormal intrahepatic circulation was shown in all cases. In 3 children liver biopsy was performed to exclude malignant disease. In one patient there was spontaneous regression of the tumour by age 3 years. In 3 cases hepatic artery ligation was necessary to control congestive cardiac failure which had persisted despite treatment with digoxin, diuretics, and oral corticosteroids, a procedure which was without complications after up to 8 years. One infant with intractable portal hypertension, hepatic vein obstruction, and severe cholestasis died with persisting alimentary haemorrhage and intra-abdominal sepsis. One child aged 4 years showed no immediate response to hepatic artery ligation but the size of her tumour got smaller and the clinical features diminished after irradiation. These tumours cause considerable morbidity and have a high reported mortality. If congestive cardiac failure is not rapidly controlled, hepatic artery ligation should be performed.
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PMID:Hepatic haemangiomata: diagnosis and management. 746 56

When compared to 32 healthy normal weight normolipidemic control subjects, plasma protein C antigen and serum cholinesterase activity were significantly decreased in 17 patients with decompensated cirrhosis of the liver and in 29 critically-ill surgical patients displaying the acute phase reaction, most of them without evidence of consumption coagulopathy. The low levels of these variables are considered to be subsequent to impaired and dysregulated hepatic protein synthesis. On the contrary, plasma protein C and serum cholinesterase were increased in 20 nephrotic patients and in 20 overweight hypertriglyceridemic subjects, a finding highly suggestive of enhanced hepatic synthesis probably related to an accelerated turnover of triglycerides. A discrepancy between low serum cholinesterase activity and normal or even high plasma protein C antigen was noted in 15 patients with cholestasis. This was particularly evident in 7 subjects with extrahepatic cholestasis and an abnormal pattern of hepatic protein synthesis or impaired clearance of plasma protein C would appear to develop in such pathological conditions.
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PMID:Clinical studies on plasma protein C. Correlation with serum cholinesterase. 829 22

Eight cases of ecstasy related acute liver damage referred to a specialised liver unit are described. Two patients presented after collapse within six hours of ecstasy ingestion with hyperthermia, hypotension, fitting, and subsequently disseminated intravascular coagulation with rhabdomyolysis together with biochemical evidence of severe hepatic damage. One patient recovered and the other with evidence of hyperacute liver failure was transplanted but subsequently died, histological examination showing widespread microvesicular fatty change. Four patients presented with acute liver failure without hyperthermia. All four fulfilled criteria for transplantation, one died before a donor organ became available, and two died within one month post-transplantation of overwhelming sepsis. Histological examination showed submassive lobular collapse. Two patients presented with abdominal pain and jaundice and recovered over a period of three weeks; histological examination showed a lobular hepatitis with cholestasis. Patients developing jaundice or with evidence of hepatic failure particularly encephalopathy and prolongation of the international normalised ratio, or both, whether or not preceded by hyperthermia, should be referred to a specialised liver unit as liver transplantation probably provides the only chance of recovery.
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PMID:Acute liver damage and ecstasy ingestion. 867 2

Intrahepatic cholestasis of pregnancy is a relatively common disease. It has an unknown etiology and may have a recurrent pattern. It commonly occurs in the 2nd-3rd trimester and characteristically presents with pruritus, jaundice and abnormal liver function tests. There is also an increased risk of preterm delivery and of cesarean section. Both maternal and neonatal prognosis is generally good. We describe a case of intrahepatic cholestasis of pregnancy with an atypical presentation and outcome. Our patient presented with acute renal and hepatic failure with hepatic encephalopathy, DIC and hypertension which was the cause of the fetal death in the third trimester of the pregnancy.
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PMID:[Intrahepatic cholestasis of pregnancy. A benign disease?]. 900 89

A female infant with hypoproteinemia and coagulopathy associated with hypertyrosinemia was successfully treated with living-related liver transplantation (LRLT). On the 12th day of life plasma amino acid analysis revealed a marked elevation of tyrosine, so the patient was fed on a low-tyrosine and low-phenylalanine diet. However, hepatosplenomegaly, hypotonia, alopecia, eczema and psychomotor delay did not improve and recurrent episodes of disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) caused her condition to deteriorate. Liver biopsy on the 230th day revealed marked fatty change accompanied by mild to moderate cholestasis. Therefore, LRLT from her father was performed on the 286th day resulting in improvement of all the aforementioned signs and symptoms. Despite a thorough examination, no diagnosis of a known disorder could be established. However, her elder brother had also been born with severe hypoproteinemia and coagulopathy, and died of DIC on the second day of life. Thus, the disorder is designated as a new entity, namely 'congenital hypoproteinemia and coagulopathy associated with hypertyrosinemia'.
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PMID:Liver transplantation in a case of hypoproteinemia and coagulopathy. 958 13

We report the case of a patient with a Salmonella Kapemba infection, who suffered, 3 weeks after a holiday in Israel, occurrences of high fever and lower back pain for 10 days and icterus for 2 days before admission. Laboratory findings revealed a slight cholestasis and elevation of acute phase protein levels. In the blood culture a Salmonella Kapemba-type organism was cultured. The patient was afebrile for 10 days after hospitalization and then suddenly developed a temperature of 40 degrees C again. At the same time leukopenia, thrombocytopenia, and a rise of D-dimer levels were detected. The patient was admitted to the intensive care unit for a few days, because a disseminated intravascular coagulation was suspected. With magnetic resonance imaging and bone scintigraphy no osteomyelitis or abscess formation could be found. A transesophageal ultrasonography of the heart revealed no signs of endocarditis. In multiple stool cultures no salmonellas could be detected. After antibiotic treatment with ciprofloxacin the fever and lower back pain subsided, and the patient was discharged a fortnight later. This is the first reported case of typhoid fever due to the bacterium Salmonella Kapemba.
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PMID:Typhoid fever due to Salmonella Kapemba infection in an otherwise healthy middle-aged man. 1036 24


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