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Query: UMLS:C0012739 (
disseminated intravascular coagulation
)
8,673
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A patient with
chronic granulocytic leukemia
developed overwhelming histoplasmosis. During massive fungemia, 59% of peripheral blood neutrophils contained yeast forms.
Disseminated intravascular coagulation
occurred. Histoplasma capsulatum was isolated not only from the patient's tissues and urine, but also from a serum sample submitted to a reference laboratory for serological testing. The microorganism was demonstrated by specific immunofluorescent staining of peripheral blood films. We suggest that histoplasmosis deserves a definite place on the roster of "opportunistic fungi".
...
PMID:Overwhelming opportunistic histoplasmosis. 39 63
We examined the changes in plasma levels of endothelin-1 (ET-1), a potent vasoconstrictor peptide, in 47 cases of
disseminated intravascular coagulation
(
DIC
) to investigate the role of ET-1 in
DIC
and its relation to multiple organ failure (MOF). A significant elevation of plasma levels of ET-1 was observed in some cases of
DIC
, especially in patients with sepsis, blastic crisis of
chronic myelogenous leukemia
, and cancer. However, no such significant elevation was observed in patients with acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL), acute leukemias except for APL, or non-Hodgkin lymphoma. Plasma levels of ET-1 were higher in patients with
DIC
with MOF than in those without MOF. Although the levels of ET-1 were decreased or remained low with clinical improvement in most
DIC
patients, the levels were further increased or remained high in patients who showed no improvement in
DIC
. It is suggested that ET-1 must play an important role in further progression of MOF with the vasoconstriction and microcirculatory disorders.
...
PMID:Role of endothelin in disseminated intravascular coagulation. 141 85
Ten patients with severe hematologic malignancies (four with acute leukemia, three with multiple myeloma, one with prolymphocytic leukemia, one with malignant lymphoma and one with blastic crisis of
chronic myelogenous leukemia
) developed respiratory failure during the period between April 1986 and May 1990. Clinically, the patients manifested high-fever, dyspnea refractory to oxygen therapy, diffuse pulmonary rales and severe hypoxemia without evidence of cardiogenic pulmonary edema. Chest roentgenograms displayed diffuse alveolar infiltrates. Respiratory failure occurred as early as 48 hours and as late as 66 days after the administration of intensive anti-neoplastic chemotherapy. At that time leukocyte count was between 100/microliters and 54,900/microliters. Marked leukocytosis was observed in two patients with AML and PLL. Respiratory failure was preceded by sepsis in one patient with AML and by pneumonia in nine patients.
DIC
was diagnosed in four patients. All patients treated with high dose methyl prednisolone (mPSL) within 12 hours after the onset of respiratory failure. Only one patient required assisted ventilation. High dose mPSL had significant effect on seven of ten patients. But three patients died from progressive respiratory failure, sepsis, pneumonia and multi-organ failure.
...
PMID:[Clinical investigation on acute respiratory failure in patients with severe hematologic malignancy]. 194 22
In a group of stable, nonthrombocytopenic leukemia patients awaiting bone marrow transplantation, results of paired allogeneic radiolabeled platelet kinetic measurements were correlated with the results of several different platelet and lymphocytotoxic antibody tests to determine which parameters could be used to identify patients who were alloimmunized to platelets. Seven patients with acute leukemia who had been transfused during induction therapy were used as the test group, and, as a control group, five untransfused patients with
chronic myelogenous leukemia
were also studied. Concurrent fibrinogen survival measurements were performed in all patients to assess whether hemostatic factor consumption (ie,
disseminated intravascular coagulation
) was present. Allogeneic platelet survival measurements were reduced from normal in all 12 study patients. In 8 of 12 patients, fibrinogen and platelet survival measurements were comparably reduced, suggesting disease-related platelet consumption. In four heavily transfused patients with acute leukemia, allogeneic platelet survivals were markedly reduced to less than or equal to 2.1 days, compared with the 3.5- to 7.4-day platelet survival measurements found in the other eight patients. The disproportionately short platelet survivals compared with fibrinogen survival measurements in these four patients, combined with documented positive antibody tests to their donors' platelets in the three patients with evaluable tests, suggested that these patients had become alloimmunized to platelets because of their prior transfusions. There was substantial concordance between the two radiolabeled allogeneic donor platelet survival measurements performed in each of these patients, suggesting that host rather than donor factors have a major influence on transfusion outcome (r = .93, P less than .001). The platelet cross-match tests, using the radiolabeled protein Staph A assay combined with the IgG enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay test, had the best correlation with the posttransfusion recovery and survival of the donors' platelets.
...
PMID:Identification of alloimmunized patients: use of radiolabeled allogeneic platelet kinetic measurements and platelet antibody tests. 203 19
Therapy with vincristine (2 mg i.v. weekly) and prednisolone (100 mg p.o. daily) caused a decrease in fibrinogen levels in nine patients treated for lymphoid blast crisis LBC) of
chronic myeloid leukemia
(
CML
). During the first days of treatment
disseminated intravascular coagulation
(
DIC
), evidence by a positive ethanol gelation test, markedly increased thrombin-antithrombin III complex and fibrin-split product D-dimer levels, and a rapid fall in fibrinogen levels was observed in two patients. The induction of
DIC
in these two patients caused profuse bleeding in one and necessitated substitution therapy with fibrinogen and platelet concentrates. The remaining seven patients revealed no signs of
DIC
; nevertheless, four of them showed a moderate increase in D-dimer levels after initiation of therapy. In these patients a well-known side effect of long-term steroid therapy, namely a decrease of fibrinogen levels, was observed within the first week of treatment. Fibrinogen levels did not fall below 150 mg/dl and increased after dose reduction from 100 mg/day to 50 mg/day. We conclude from our results that two types of disturbances in fibrinogen metabolism can be observed during vincristine/prednisolone therapy of LBC of
CML
: (a) a decrease of fibrinogen levels due to a steroid-mediated impairment of liver synthesis, and (b) a rapid fall in fibrinogen levels in the course of
DIC
, most likely induced by the release of procoagulants from deteriorating blast cells, leading to severe bleeding in selected cases.
...
PMID:Disseminated intravascular coagulation and decrease in fibrinogen levels induced by vincristine/prednisolone therapy of lymphoid blast crisis of chronic myeloid leukemia. 204 63
We quantitatively assayed the levels of cross-linked fibrin degradation products (D dimer) in plasma at 73 points in time in 32 patients with elevated fibrin/fibrinogen degradation products (FDP) in serum. The assay of FDP was performed on serum samples prepared in test tubes containing 5 U/ml thrombin (final concentration) by a method based on latex agglutination using antifibrinogen antibodies, and the levels of D dimer in plasma were determined by a newly developed latex immunoassay using monoclonal antibodies which do not cross-react with fibrinogen. 5 patients with
chronic myelogenous leukemia
(
CML
) had highly elevated FDP levels with normal levels of D dimer. Plasma samples from such patients with
CML
were treated with various concentrations of thrombin (2-10 U/ml) and after the removal of fibrin clots the levels of FDP in supernatants were assayed by the FDP assay procedure described above. The levels of FDP were normalized when plasma were treated with 10 U/ml thrombin. In 2 patients with
CML
who had elevated levels of FDP in serum, it was impossible to remove fibrinogen completely by addition of 5 U/ml thrombin. However, FDP levels in the sera treated with 5 U/ml thrombin were almost normal in normal controls and patients with other diseases than
CML
. From these results it is concluded that residual fibrinogen reacted in the assay procedure as markedly increased FDP in supernatants and elevated FDP levels in serum reflected fibrinogen-related materials, which may not completely polymerize in the presence of lower concentrations of thrombin in some patients with
CML
. The assay of D dimer in plasma using monoclonal antibodies is recommended in cases of
CML
to rule out
disseminated intravascular coagulation
.
...
PMID:Role of D dimer in patients with elevated fibrinogen degradation products in serum: further study in chronic myelogenous leukemia. 212 66
A 25-year-old man, known to have
chronic myeloid leukaemia
for four years, acutely developed a fever of 39.5 degrees and severe pain in the shoulder and hip joints. There was no evidence of joint disease. Treatment with indomethacin briefly improved the symptoms, but within 72 hours the patient developed a fulminant illness with high fever and clinical as well as biochemical signs of a severe
consumption coagulopathy
. Herpetiform efflorescences appeared over the head and trunk shortly before death. At autopsy there was histological and immunohistochemical evidence of a varicella infection with hepatitis, oesophageal involvement and severe internal organ bleedings. In immune-compromised patients with atypical prodromal symptoms a varicella infection must be considered so that causal treatment with acyclovir and hyperimmune-globulin can be begun in time.
...
PMID:[Atypical joint symptoms as initial symptoms of varicella infection in chronic myeloid leukemia]. 222 57
Seven cases of miliary tuberculosis in patients with hematologic disease were analyzed clinicopathologically. Mean age of the patients was 65 years, and the hematologic diseases were
CML
, AML, ALL, MDS and malignant lymphoma. Diabetes mellitus was present as a complication in three patients. Miliary tuberculosis was found in 5 cases during the first admission to our hospital owing to hematologic problems. In 4 of 6 cases, fever had started more than two months before admission, consequently, the tuberculosis probably began about that time. After admission, chemotherapy was administered in 5 cases, and steroid in 6 cases for hematologic disease. The mean total quantity of steroid administered was 2,134 mg of prednisolone and average treatment duration was 69 days. The chest roentgenographic shadow was so atypical that miliary tuberculosis was suspected in only one case. The initial chest roentgenogram showed hilar and mediastinal lymph node swelling as well as the shadow of pulmonary tuberculosis in two cases. It was thought that the hilar and mediastinal lymph node swelling could be explained by primary complex, although the patients were of advanced age, or by "secondary complex" reported by Terplan, K in 1940. The diagnosis of tuberculosis was made in two patients before their death by smear of aspirated fluid of cervical lymph node and by bone marrow cell block in one patients, and by pathological examination of mediastinal lymph node biopsy in the other patients. Tubercles were found from bone marrow cell block in 2 out of 5 patients and from bone marrow biopsy in 1 out of 3 patients, but the positive results were reported in 2 patients following death. Smears of sputum, gastric juice, urine, spinal fluid and pleural effusion were negative in all cases. One patient diagnosed as miliary tuberculosis also had pneumocystis carinii pneumonia. This case was treated with antituberculosis drugs for 20 days without improvement. Another patient diagnosed as miliary tuberculosis improved under treatment with antituberculosis drugs, but died of cytomegalovirus pneumonia. Autopsy in 5 cases revealed non-reactive miliary tuberculosis, and pulmonary hemorrhage probably due to
DIC
was present as a complication in two cases. In these cases, severe immunosuppression, which is a major precipitating factor of miliary tuberculosis, is thought to be induced by hematologic disease itself, chemotherapy, steroid or other underlying disease such as diabetes mellitus. Miliary tuberculosis in such compromised host is cryptic and progresses rapidly. Consequently, early diagnosis is very important. Retrospectively, the unexplained pyrexia was most important to suspect tuberculosis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Clinicopathological study of miliary tuberculosis in patients with hematologic disease]. 237 32
The retrospective study of acute renal failure (ARF) in patients with hematologic neoplasms was carried out. ARF occurred in 32 (6.1%) of 526 patients with hematologic neoplasms. Twenty-one (66%) patients recovered from ARF, but only 7 (22%) survived and were discharged from the hospital and 25 (78%) died of ARF or other complications. In 17 patients with leukemia or malignant histiocytosis, sepsis and/or
disseminated intravascular coagulation
were the most common causes of ARF, and all 17 patients died. In 11 patients with multiple myeloma, ARF was always attributable to the underlying disease, and the clinical course improved with the initiation of blood purification therapy (hemodialysis, plasma exchange) and chemotherapy. Five patients in blast crisis of
chronic myelogenous leukemia
or non-Hodgkin's lymphoma developed ARF as a result of tumor lysis syndrome. In this group, renal function improved with hemodialysis but only 2 patients survived. Patients with oliguria had worse outcomes than those without oliguria. Survival appeared to depend not on renal function but on the underlying disease, the cause of ARF, and other complications. These findings suggest that, in patients with hematologic neoplasms complicated by ARF, early initiation of blood purification therapy will improve the prognosis.
...
PMID:[Acute renal failure in patients with hematologic neoplasms]. 238 Oct 56
In the present study plasma fibronectin levels were determined in patients with hematopoietic malignancy, particularly leukemias, in an effort to clarify their clinical implications. Among leukemia patients, those with AML, ALL, ATL or CLL had various plasma fibronectin levels that were higher in some cases, while lower in others, as compared to normal control values. An elevation of the fibronectin level was noted often in APL, while lower fibronectin values were observed in many instances of
CML
. In these types of leukemia, acute exacerbation as well as supervention of infection tended to be associated with lower than normal levels of fibronectin. An especially marked depression of fibronectin occurred, when leukemia was complicated by sepsis or
DIC
, in which a good parallel was noted between the progress of disease and the fibronectin level. In lymphoproliferative diseases, the fibronectin value varied widely, but low fibronectin levels were frequently associated with intercurrent infection or an extreme deterioration of the general physical conditions.
...
PMID:Variation of plasma fibronectin levels in leukemia patients. 248 45
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