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Query: UMLS:C0012739 (
disseminated intravascular coagulation
)
8,673
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The infant or child who presents to the Emergency Department with bacterial meningitis may have nonspecific vague symptoms with few signs of serious illness. However, the disease is often rapidly progressive and life-threatening, and may be associated with respiratory failure, circulatory failure, increased intracranial pressure,
disseminated intravascular coagulation
, or convulsions, any of which may lead to a fatal outcome. It is important for the triage technician in an Emergency Department to cautiously inspect each young patient who presents with illness, carefully considering whether the presenting syndrome of symptoms and signs might be consistent with early meningitis. If the young patient is triaged in a nonemergent category, then periodic assessments of the patients waiting to be seen may ensure that, when the infant or child with an obscure presentation develops evidence suggesting this diagnosis, the triage technician will promptly notify the appropriate definitive care providers who assume responsibility for immediate definitive evaluation and stabilization. Changes in delivery of lifesaving care to the life-threatened child are being impacted by current advances in the understanding of the biochemical basis of disease at the cellular and subcellular levels. Endotoxin release into the blood causes increased production of kinins, which results in vasodilatation and increased vascular permeability. Members of the leukotriene family may also enhance vascular permeability as well as produce augmented leukocyte aggregation to vascular endothelium, vasoconstriction, and bronchoconstriction. Endotoxin activates the complement cascade and induces platelets to form reversible aggregates that may be trapped in the pulmonary microcirculation; and endotoxemia-activated platelets release serotonin, which may be associated with pulmonary hypertension. Now that we have antibiotics that are effective against organisms whose degradation produces endotoxin, there is interest in lessening the host inflammatory response to endotoxin through use of dexamethasone as an anti-inflammatory agent. Clinical trials have revealed that patients who received dexamethasone became afebrile earlier and were less likely to acquire
deafness
after bacterial meningitis. Because administration of antibiotics is the current specific medical therapy for this life-threatening microbial invasion, it is reasonable to continue to strive to shorten the interval between recognition of disease and specific therapy. However, new studies suggest that consequences of the complex host inflammatory response (at the cellular and subcellular level) to microbial invasion and endotoxin release from bacterial degradation are increasingly important in determining survival or severity of morbidity. Therapeutic intervention with specific antibiotics and steroid anti-inflammatory agents for modulating host responses enhances outcome.
...
PMID:Emergency department stabilization of pediatric patients with bacterial meningitis. Current advances. 189 92
We report a 24-year-old man who presented unilateral multiple cranial nerve involvements followed by progressive paraplegia. The patient expired after developing
DIC
and pneumonia. Post-mortem examination revealed Ewing's sarcoma originated in the pubic bone with extensive metastases including the clivus which was responsible for his cranial nerve lesions. The patient was well until 24 years of age when he noted an onset of pain and a mass in the pubic region. The histology of the biopsy specimen of the tumor suggested Ewing's sarcoma. He was treated with chemotherapy and local radiation. A year after, he noted an onset of nuchal pain, difficulty in tongue movement, dysarthria,
deafness
in the left ear, and diplopia. On admission to our hospital in July 1990, neurological examination revealed an alert and intelligent Japanese male in no acute distress. The olfactory to the trigeminal nerves appeared intact. He showed complete abducens nerve palsy, facial weakness, mild
deafness
, and weakness of the soft palate, the sternocleidomastoid muscle and the tongue, all on the left side. The remainder of the neurological examination was unremarkable except for dysesthesia along the left C8 and Th1 dermatoms. Radiological examination revealed a 10 x 10 cm sclerotic mass in the public bone and a high signal mass lesion between the clivus and the pons in the T2-weighted MRI. His clinical course was complicated by acute paraplegia with anesthesia below the Th4 dermatom,
DIC
, and respiratory distress due to plural effusion. Post-mortem examination revealed a necrotic and hemorrhagic tumor in the pubic bone. The histology was consistent with Ewing's sarcoma.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[A 24-year-old man presenting Garcin syndrome and paraplegia]. 847 71
We describe the case of a 44-years-old female patient with a panarteritis nodosa preceded by a rapid progressive bilateral
deafness
after an acute otitis media. Once on treatment with steroids and cyclophosphamide, she developed a
disseminated intravascular coagulation
, with a fatal evolution not justifiable by a different cause apart from her main disease.
...
PMID:[Disseminated intravascular coagulation in a patient with polyarteritis nodosa and bilateral hypoacusis]. 1080 38
An hemorheological study on whole blood filterability (WBF) was done in eleven patients bearing of sudden
deafness
, in a continuous way, even before clinical onset. This evaluation is making usually in animal models, but not in humans. Independently of clinical diagnosis of each patient (two cases of diabetes mellitus, one of ulcerative colitis, systemic lupus erythematosus, systemic hypertension, after blood transfusion, sepsis with
disseminated intravascular coagulation
, upper respiratory ways infection, after surgery, and two healthy individuals), all of them showed a decreased WBF when hearing loss appeared (from 19.97 +/- 1.15 microliters/sec to 16.87 +/- 1.21 microliters/sec). This value normalized at six or seven days from the onset in cases with some kind of hearing recovery (18.83 +/- 1.01 microliters/sec, n = 4), but did not in those with no improvement even at thirty days (17.39 +/- 0.77 microliters/sec, n = 7). There were differences in WBF values of patients with and without hearing recovery in determinations at seven and thirty days from onset. Decrease in WBF accompanies this hearing disorder and confirms the cochlear microcirculation susceptibility to the impairment of blood viscoelastic properties.
...
PMID:[Non-interventional study on blood filterability changes in the clinical onset of sensorineural sudden deafness]. 1169 47