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)

We studied functional protein C activity, both anticoagulant and amidolytic, as well as protein C antigen in 30 normal subjects, several members of a family with congenital protein C deficiency, 18 patients with severe preeclampsia, 27 patients with coronary heart disease, including 15 patients with myocardial infarction and 12 with angina pectoris, 20 patients on stable oral anticoagulant therapy (thrombotest values: 3-12%) and three patients with disseminated intravascular coagulation. Protein C values measured by the coagulant assay were compared to those obtained with amidolytic and immunochemical assays. In all the groups studied, the activity assays (amidolytic and coagulant) correlated significantly with each other as well as with the immunochemical assay. In patients on oral anticoagulant therapy the coagulant assay gave lower protein C values than amidolytic and immunochemical assays. A good correlation was found between immunological and amidolytic protein C assays (r=0.90, p less than 0.001), immunological and coagulant protein C assays (r=0.93, p less than 0.001), and amidolytic and coagulant protein C assays (r=0.95, p less than 0.001) in all the samples studied without including the protein C values of patients on oral anticoagulant therapy. These results allow us to recommend the functional protein C coagulant assay in patients on stable oral anticoagulant therapy because only this assay evaluates the "in vivo" protein C function in these patients.
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PMID:Assay of protein C in human plasma: comparison of amidolytic, coagulation, and immunochemical assays. 379 19

A significant correlation was found between heightened plasma viscosity and increased red blood cell aggregation and the severity of coronary artery disease. At low shear rates and exhausted vasomotion these rheological factors can cause a reversible loss of fluidity. The reduced fluidity may induce a limitation in microcirculatory flow due to the viscus resistance. Rheological treatments aim at restoration of impaired perfusion by decreasing plasma viscosity and thus diminishing red blood cell aggregation. Further therapeutic measures tend to improve red blood cell deformability. Because of limited coronary reserve in coronary artery disease hemodilution therapy is contraindicated except the cases with polyglobulia. Thrombolytic therapy in acute myocardial infarction causes a significant reduction of plasma viscosity and red cell aggregation for at least 72 hours. This improvement in blood fluidity may beneficially influence the reperfusion of ischemic areas. A therapy with orally active hemorheological drugs (pentoxifylline and buflomedil) can be discussed as an additive treatment in severe angina pectoris refractory to specific medical therapy, since these drugs increase fluidity and inhibit platelet aggregation. The defibrination may cause thrombotic and bleeding complications in the early phase of treatment. Coronary small vessel disease represents a rare type of coronary heart disease. This disease is defined by normal epicardial coronaries and reduced coronary artery reserve. In disorders of coronary microcirculation with abnormal rheology (Waldenstrom's macroglobulinemia) rheological treatment is a rational and causal therapy.
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PMID:[Hemorheologic therapy applications in coronary heart disease]. 382 69

Two cases of spontaneous atheromatous embolization associated with unusual complications are presented. One is an 85-year-old man who developed an acute abdomen and underwent a surgical resection of totally infarcted left-sided colon. Histologically, multiple acute atheromatous emboli were found occluding the serosal and pericolic mesenteric arteries causing transmural necrosis of the involved portion of bowel. The other is an 80-year-old woman who had had a coronary heart disease, hypertension, and renal insufficiency, and terminally developed a rapid deterioration of renal function and melena. Postmortem examination showed a severely, ulcerated, aortic atherosclerosis and widespread, recurrent, atheromatous emboli in many abdominal organs with the resultant severe nephrosclerosis, gastrointestinal mucosal hemorrhagic necrosis, and multiple infarcts in the pancreas and spleen. In addition, there was focal cortical necrosis of the kidneys accompanied with glomerular capillary fibrin thrombi indicating disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC). These findings seen in the present two cases were briefly discussed in light of the previous pertinent literature.
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PMID:Atheromatous embolization. Report of two cases with unusual complications. 650 92