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Query: UMLS:C0012739 (
disseminated intravascular coagulation
)
8,673
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Sixteen cases of neonatal
cold
injury, five of them fatal, were seen in the winter of 1974-75. The affected infants, who weighed from 2.5 to 3 kg. had developed symptoms when the ambient termperature was below 10 C. Few of them were referred as cases of hypothermia. Refusal to eat was the most common complaint and less often edema and/or apathy. No correlation was found between death and ethnic origin, sex, duration of illness or minimum temperature. Admission weight, however, tended to be lower in the infants who died. The consistent finding of thrombocytopenia and the suspected bleeding phenomena suggested that
disseminated intravascular coagulation
may have been a factor in the unfavorable outcome of some of the cases. Evidence supporting such a hypothesis and proposals for the prevention. Diagnosis and treatment of neonatal
cold
injury are presented.
...
PMID:Cold injury in early infancy. 32 24
Shock continues to be associated with a high mortality rate primarily because of delays in diagnosis and therapy. To diagnose shock early, and thereby increase the chances of reversal before there is extensive deterioration of vital organs, one should look for any decrease in pulse pressure, urine output, urine sodium concentration, alertness or any increase in urine osmolarity, tachypnea or tachycardia. Systolic hypotension, oliguria, metabolic acidosis and a
cold
clammy skin are late signs of shock. The pathophysiology of early hypovolemic shock includes hyperventilation, vasoconstriction, cardiac stimulation, fluid shifts into the vascular system and platelet aggregation. Late shock is characterized by lysosomal breakdown, subsequent release of kinins (especially bradykinin), impaired cell metabolism and organ function, fluid shifts out of the vascular system because of capillary endothelial damage and intravascular coagulation. The primary cause of shock should not be neglected in favor of treating signs, symptoms, and laboratory data. The resuscitation from the shock process itself involves correction of pathophysiologic changes, based on objective trends and responses rather than isolated measurements. A suggested outline of therapies in order of their use includes: 1) correction of the primary problem; 2) ventilation and oxygen; 3) fluid-loading: 4) inotropic agents; 5) correction of acid-based and electrolyte abnormalities; 6) steroids ("physiologic" or "pharmacologic" doses); 7) vasopressors (especially in elderly, severely hypotensive patients); 8) vasodilators (if excess vasoconstriction); 9) diuretics (if oliguric in spite of the above), and 10) heparin (if
DIC
). The most common errors are 1) late diagnosis; 2) inadequate control of the primary problems; 3) inadequate fluid loading; 4) delayed ventilator assistance, and 5) excessive reliance on and use if vasopressors and diuretics.
...
PMID:Shock in the emergency department. 79 60
Five patients illustrate various aspects of obstetrical
defibrination
in West Malaysia, resulting from exaggeration of changes in fibrinolytic-coagulation equilibrium that occur at delivery. Hypofibrinogenaemia and fibrinolysis may occur in association or either feature predominate. These patients are from a population in which a variety of genetic and environmental factors may interact, e.g. abnormal haemoglobins,
cold
agglutinins, viral and other infections, introducing additional complications.
...
PMID:Aspects of obstetrical defibrination in West Malaysia. 108 31
A number of different methods are available for the measurement of factor VIIa. Almost all of these employ ratios of two different measurements of factor VII. In order to determine which is the most sensitive to activated factor VII we have compared currently available methods in the following groups: two patients with haemophilia A following treatment with activated recombinant factor VII (rVIIa); 6 normal plasmas during
cold
promoted activation of factor VII; normal individuals (n = 23); and patients with unequivocal
disseminated intravascular coagulation
(
DIC
, n = 19). Factor VII was measured in an amidolytic assay (VII:Amid) and an antigen assay (VII:Ag). Clotting activity was measured using rabbit (VII:C Rab), human (VII:C Hum) and bovine (VII:C Bov) thromboplastin. Of the clotting assays the most sensitive to the presence of factor VIIa was that which utilised bovine thromboplastin. Amidolytic and immunological measurements were unaffected by the activity state of factor VII. The ratios VII:C Rab/VII:Ag and VII:C Rab/VII:Amid were insensitive to activated factor VII. The ratios most sensitive to the presence of factor VIIa were VII:C Bov/VII:Amid and VII:C Bov/VII:Ag. The ratios VII:C Bov/VII:C Rab and VII:C Bov/VII:C Hum are less sensitive but have the advantage for epidemiological studies of narrower reference ranges.
...
PMID:A comparison of methods for the measurement of activated factor VII. 144 Apr 96
The pathophysiology of peripheral circulatory disturbance in patients presenting with vibration syndrome was studied from the viewpoint of blood coagulation. Plasma levels of fibronectin (FN), vitronectin (VN), thrombin-antithrombin III complex (TAT), and alpha 2-plasmin inhibitor-plasmin complex (PIC) were measured in 23 subjects who showed no evidence of vibration-induced white finger [VWF(-) group] and in 24 patients who presented with VWF [VWF(+) group]. In the VWF(-) group, plasma FN concentrations were elevated but plasma TAT and PIC levels were within the normal ranges. In the VWF(+) group, plasma FN concentrations were normal but plasma TAT and PIC levels were significantly elevated. In both groups, plasma VN concentrations were similar to those in normal controls. For purposes of comparison, 32 patients presenting with diabetes mellitus were also studied. They were divided into 2 groups, 13 subjects who showed no evidence of angiopathy [complication(-) group] and 19 patients who presented with angiopathy [complication(+) group]. In the complication(+) group, plasma TAT and PIC concentrations were significantly elevated, as in the VWF(+) group. These results suggest that in vibration syndrome, vibration,
cold
stimulus, or other factors first injure the vascular endothelium, resulting in a rise in plasma FN, and that in the VWF(+) group, augmentation of coagulation and fibrinolysis induces a state of compensated
disseminated intravascular coagulation
(
DIC
).
...
PMID:Activation of blood coagulation and fibrinolysis in vibration syndrome. 172 Jul 65
Rabbits were given polyclonal anti-tissue factor (TF) immunoglobulin G (IgG) before an injection of endotoxin to test the hypothesis that TF triggers
disseminated intravascular coagulation
(
DIC
) after endotoxin. The rabbits had been prepared with cortisone to develop
DIC
after one injection of endotoxin. Anti-TF IgG substantially reduced the falls in fibrinogen, factors V and VIII, and platelets noted in control rabbits given preimmune IgG before endotoxin. At autopsy 24 hours later, fibrin was present in glomerular capillaries of 4 of 5 control rabbits, but in none of 11 rabbits given anti-TF IgG.
DIC
was also induced in a second group of rabbits by the infusion, over 4 hours, of 1 microgram/kg of purified, reconstituted rabbit brain TF. This resulted in striking falls in plasma fibrinogen, factors V, and VIII that were diminished, but not prevented by prior treatment with anti-TF IgG. Circulating activated factor VII, induced by either TF infusion or endotoxin, could not be detected after
DIC
. Mean plasma extrinsic pathway inhibitor (EPI) activity did not fall significantly after endotoxin, and only to about 65% of the preinfusion after infusion of TF. Thus,
DIC
induced by both agents proceeded despite nearly normal plasma EPI levels. Because EPI neutralizes factor VIIa/TF in vitro only after a short lag period, the
DIC
that persisted for up to 6 hours after injection of endotoxin suggests that TF activity continued to be generated during this period on cells to which the circulating blood was exposed. All animals given endotoxin became ill with cyanosis, tachypnea,
cold
ears, and diarrhea, regardless of whether they had received anti-TF IgG to attenuate
DIC
. Infusion of TF caused some animals to die acutely with pulmonary arterial thromboses, but surviving animals did not appear ill. The findings support the hypothesis that exposure of blood to TF triggers
DIC
after endotoxin, but is not important for the pathogenesis of endotoxin-induced shock.
...
PMID:Disseminated intravascular coagulation in rabbits induced by administration of endotoxin or tissue factor: effect of anti-tissue factor antibodies and measurement of plasma extrinsic pathway inhibitor activity. 231 59
Anterogradely and retrogradely transported membranous organelles were analysed separately by focally cooling axons (
cold
-blocking) for 2-4 h. Video-enhanced differential interference contrast light microscopy (AVEC-
DIC
) and dark field light microscopy showed that particles accumulated in large numbers on both the anterograde and the retrograde sides of the
cold
-block and that the accumulated particles resumed their transport when the preparation was rewarmed to 18 degrees C. The particles accumulated in files on both sides of the
cold
-block suggesting that particles move along linear pathways in the axoplasm. Comparisons of the results obtained by AVEC-
DIC
light microscopy with those obtained by electron microscopy indicate that the AVEC-
DIC
method is capable of detecting all of the different types of rapidly transported membranous organelles, including the smallest (35-80 nm) vesicles that move anterogradely. Electron microscopic analyses of the transported particles demonstrate that the anterogradely transported organelles are structurally distinct from those that are transported retrogradely. The anterogradely transported particles consisted of normal mitochondria and small (35-80 nm) tubulovesicular profiles. By contrast, the retrogradely transported particles were 150 nm or larger and they often contained complex membranous inclusions. The largest retrogradely transported particles appeared to be degenerating mitochondria. The results are consistent with the hypothesis that the direction of organelle movement is related to the physiological state of the organelle. That is, organelles containing newly synthesized membrane components move primarily anterogradely and organelles that contain transformed and degraded membrane components move retrogradely.
...
PMID:AVEC-DIC and electron microscopic analyses of axonally transported particles in cold-blocked squid giant axons. 241 17
126 cases of sepsis were retrospectively studied in an Internal Medicine Department, giving special attention to the clinical evolution. 67 males and 59 females with a median age of 65 years old were discovered. 92% had one or more diseases, mainly
COLD
(30%) and diabetes mellitus (28%). The septic sources were urinary (37%) and respiratory (31%). 84% of the germs were gram (-), mainly E. Coli and Proteus sp. A mortality rate of 36% was found, the primary rates being: eighth decade (52%), patients with neoplastic disease (46%), biliary tract diseases (64%), endocarditis (66%), infection by Serratia (60%), Pseudomonas (50%), shock (55%) and
DIC
(50%). These last two complications were analysed and found to be the more frequent (35% and 6.3% respectively), also being those with higher mortality rate. Finally, the prognostic factors are established based on the results obtained.
...
PMID:[Sepsis: clinical course study of 126 patients in an internal medicine department]. 249 19
Prostaglandin E1 (PGE1) has a direct vasodilating effect to smooth muscles of resistant vessel much more than that of capacitance one. In afterload mismatch, vasodilator which acts on resistant vessel mainly should be selected. We used PGE1 for vasodilator therapy to two patients with low cardiac output syndrome (LOS) in intensive care unit. One patient undergoing coronary artery bypass grafting developed LOS and
disseminated intravascular coagulation
which derived from post-transfusional anaphylactoid reaction. Another patient undergoing mitral valve replacement, tricuspid valve annuloplasty and coronary artery bypass grafting also developed LOS with massive thrombosis caused by
cold
agglutinin during cardio-pulmonary bypass. In both patients, PGE1 decreased systemic vascular resistance index and pulmonary arterial resistance index, and increased cardiac output. PGE1 inhibits release of lysosomal enzymes from polymorphonuclear leukocytes and increases splanchnic blood flow. These effects lead to inhibit production of myocardial depressant factor and might relate to the improvement of LOS partially. We suggest that PGE1 was effective for LOS after cardiac surgery, especially in afterload mismatch.
...
PMID:[Prostaglandin E1, as a vasodilator therapy, for low output syndrome after cardiac surgery]. 261 23
The current study was undertaken to determine if
cold
crystalloid perfusion of the mesenteric circulation or continuous arterial shunting into the superior mesenteric artery would prevent the subsequent development of
disseminated intravascular coagulation
in a dog model. Twenty-two dogs were divided into four groups: those with distal aortic occlusion; those with isolated washout of the mesenteric circulation via the superior mesenteric artery with
cold
crystalloid; those with continuous isolated arterial perfusion of the superior mesenteric artery via an open proximal aorta; and those with shunting of blood into the superior mesenteric artery from the proximal aorta with an Inahara-Pruitt shunt. Coagulation parameters were measured for 24 hours and compared to the results with 32 dogs in the following groups: sham operation; supraceliac aortic occlusion for 30 minutes, 60 minutes, 90 minutes; superior mesenteric occlusion for 90 minutes; and celiac axis occlusion for 90 minutes. Shunting or direct arterial perfusion of the superior mesenteric artery prevented
disseminated intravascular coagulation
from occurring. Infrarenal aortic occlusion resulted in no change in any of the coagulation factors, whereas crystalloid perfusion of the superior mesenteric artery resulted in death in all animals. These results indicate that the
disseminated intravascular coagulation
that occurs with supraceliac aortic occlusion or superior mesenteric occlusion of greater then one hour can be prevented by continuous arterial perfusion of the superior mesenteric artery during proximal aortic clamping.
...
PMID:Mesenteric shunting during thoracoabdominal aortic clamping to prevent disseminated intravascular coagulation in dogs. 319 Oct 7
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