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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 case of a 59-year-old man with paralytic ileus (pseudo-obstruction) associated with
pheochromocytoma
is reviewed. Paralytic ileus is believed to have been the result of overstimulation of alpha and beta receptors on the intestine by catecholamines. Phentolamine, bunazocin, propranolol, bethanechol and midaglizole in single administrations or in combination were administered. Phentolamine infusion clearly relieved the symptom, but ileus recurred, and the patient died of respiratory failure, liver dysfunction and
disseminated intravascular coagulation
syndrome. The significant role of catecholamines in causing these symptoms is discussed, and the management of this relatively rare complication is reviewed.
...
PMID:The treatment of pheochromocytoma associated with pseudo-obstruction and perforation of the colon, hepatic failure, and DIC. 198 Mar 22
The kinetics of thrombin generation in various prothrombin-complex-preparations (
PCC
) were investigated using a chromogenic substrate assay. The rate of thrombin formation and the total activity of thrombin generated varied considerably among different preparations. The thrombin generation velocity influenced the rate of fibrinogen to fibrin conversion, measured as plasma viscosity alteration per unit of time. It also influenced thrombin induced platelet aggregation with regard to maximum aggregation and aggregation velocity. The kinetic parameters measured photometrically and coagulometrically showed reduced generation velocities and less thrombin effects with thrombin formed in PCCs than with thrombin generated in plasma. The quantitative differences between thrombin effects in various PCCs on platelet aggregation did not correlate with the data of the amidolytic and fibrinogenolytic measurements. The significance of the results is discussed with regard to the question of whether, or to what extent, PCCs could cause or accelerate a
disseminated intravascular coagulation
.
...
PMID:Thrombin generation in prothrombin-complex-preparations; its effect on a chromogenic substrate, fibrinogen and platelets. 223 26
To test the value of diagnostic and therapeutic data in obstetric
DIC
, 14 women were selected who presented a severe clotless haemorrhage with fibrin degradation products and/or soluble complexes, decreased fibrinogen (0.87 +/- 0.47 g X 1(-1)), platelet count (75.7 +/- 41 X 10(3) X ml-1) and prothrombin complex (33.7 +/- 12%). The hypovolaemia was treated at the same time as heparin was given in a bolus injection of 0.5 mg X kg-1 followed by a constant flow infusion of 1 mg X kg-1 X day-1 in all patients. Relevant obstetrical treatment was performed in 71.4% of patients. Fibrinogen, fresh frozen plasma, prothrombin complex concentrate and platelet concentrate were given if required. One patient, with severe toxaemia, died. Haemorrhage was stopped in 92.8% of patients after 4.5 +/- 0.8 h. Reversible visceral complications occurred in 28% of cases. The initial data used was easily obtained and seemed to give a reliable diagnosis in acute obstetrical
DIC
. Substitutive treatment was discussed in correlation with the evolution:
PCC
seemed pointless; the use of fibrinogen must become exceptional when fresh frozen plasma is available. Heparin remained necessary.
...
PMID:[Disseminated intravascular coagulation. Retrospective study of 14 acute obstetrical cases]. 665 Sep 31
A 63-year-old woman was in hospital for persistent backache. Four months prior to admission she had been pointed out as having hypertension for the first time. On admission, she had anemia (hemoglobin 7.0 g/dl) with reticulocytosis, and a blood smear showed fragmented erythrocytes. A bone marrow aspirate disclosed erythroid hyperplasia and invasion of cancer cells. The chest roentgenogram showed a coin-lesion of the right lung and left pleural effusion. A diagnosis of microangiopathic hemolytic anemia (MAHA) associated with carcinomatosis was made, but the primary site of the cancer was unknown. Respiratory failure developed and the patient died a month later. Surprisingly, the autopsy revealed a malignant
pheochromocytoma
arising from the right adrenal gland with massive metastases to the lungs, liver, lymph nodes and systemic bones, and also
disseminated intravascular coagulation
(
DIC
). The
DIC
would probably account for the MAHA in this case. To our knowledge, this is the first reported case of malignant
pheochromocytoma
accompanied by MAHA.
...
PMID:Malignant pheochromocytoma accompanied by microangiopathic hemolytic anemia: a case report. 800 27
The unusual case of a 65-year-old woman with intermittent hypotension, fever, pulmonary edema and coma as initial presentation of
pheochromocytoma
is reported. The patient developed respiratory, cardiac and renal failure,
disseminated intravascular coagulation
and liver dysfunction. She had to be defibrillated on multiple occasions, occurring in periods of severe hypertension. After successful surgical removal of a
pheochromocytoma
a thyroid medullary carcinoma was detected. Several members of the patients family had presented with multiple endocrine neoplasia (MEN II).
...
PMID:Multiple organ failure and coma as initial presentation of pheochromocytoma in a patient with multiple endocrine neoplasia (MEN) type II A. 810 32
A patient with malignant cardiac
pheochromocytoma
with bone metastases is described. The primary tumor was located between the pulmonary trunk and the left atrium, while metastatic lesions were found in the iliac bones. Treatments with antihypertensive agents, alpha-methylparatyrosine, and combination chemotherapy with cyclophosphamide, vincristine, and dacarbazine partially improved the patient's symptoms, catecholamine levels, and the metastatic lesion of the iliac bones. However, the primary tumor in the heart progressively increased in size and the patient died of
disseminated intravascular coagulation
and other various complications about 4 years after the diagnosis of the disease.
...
PMID:Cardiac malignant pheochromocytoma with bone metastases. 986 56
Four-factor PCCs are most frequently used for replacement of vitamin K-dependent clotting factors and inhibitors proteins C and S in patients bleeding after phenprocoumon or warfarin overdose, in vitamin K-deficient patients presenting life-threatening bleeding, and liver disease. Since many of these patients are prone to thromboembolic complications including
DIC
, all conceivable measures should be taken against the thrombogenic potential of
PCC
preparations. This thrombogenic potential of PCCs is obviously dependent on several factors including activated clotting factors, lack of inhibitors of blood coagulation, and coagulation factor overload, as well as predisposing factors referred to recipients and drug interactions. The composition of
PCC
should meet the following criteria: Antithrombin in addition to heparin for the neutralization of FIXa and FXa should be present in the preparations; no overloading with FII and FX; substantially lower FVII than FIX potencies in order to minimize contamination with or generation of FVIIa; and substantial protein C as well as protein S activities. Quality control should include determinations as recommended by the European Pharmacopoeia. Specific assays for quantification of FIXa and FXa are urgently required, and validity of these assays must be proven in surveys. All lots should also be tested for their FVIIa content. Furthermore, the safety of PCCs must be proven by suitable animal models. Whenever possible, patients receiving PCCs should be under low-dose heparin prophylaxis; simultaneous administration of heparin-neutralizing drugs or antifibrinolytic agents must be avoided.
...
PMID:Production and composition of prothrombin complex concentrates: correlation between composition and therapeutic efficiency. 1049 3
Ectopic ACTH syndrome is rarely caused by
pheochromocytoma
. We report a case of a 28-year-old woman with Cushing's syndrome due to ACTH-producing adrenal
pheochromocytoma
. She had delivered preterm baby at 32nd week of gestation with 'severe preeclampsia'. After delivery, persistent hypertension accompanied by severe headache led her to being misdiagnosed as Cushing's syndrome due to right adrenal adenoma (normal plasma ACTH level) and cerebral vasculitis of unknown etiology. She was referred to our hospital for surgical treatment. Repeated biochemical studies suggested coexistence of ectopic ACTH syndrome and
pheochromocytoma
. To reverse her clinical deterioration, right total and left subtotal adrenalectomy was performed with presumptive diagnosis of 1) right adrenal
pheochromocytoma
causing ectopic ACTH syndrome or 2) coexistence of ACTH-dependent Cushing's syndrome and right adrenal
pheochromocytoma
. Pathologic examination of right adrenal mass revealed
pheochromocytoma
which showed strong immunostaining for ACTH. Plasma ACTH and urinary cortisol excretion normalized after surgery, but she succumbed to multiple cerebral infarcts and
disseminated intravascular coagulation
. Pregnancy and inappropriately low plasma ACTH at initial evaluation might have hampered early diagnosis. To our knowledge, this is the first description of a case with ectopic ACTH syndrome due to
pheochromocytoma
associated with pregnancy.
...
PMID:A case of ACTH-producing pheochromocytoma associated with pregnancy. 1470 46
Systematic evaluations of anemia, thrombocytopenia, and coagulopathy are essential to identifying and managing their causes successfully. In all cases, clinicians should evaluate RBC measurements alongside WBC and platelet counts and WBC differentials. Multiple competing factors may coexist; certain factors affect RBCs independent of those that affect WBCs or platelets. Ideally, clinicians should examine the peripheral blood smear for morphologic features of RBCs, WBCs, and platelets that provide important clues to the cause of the patient's hematologic disorder. Thrombocytopenia arises from decreased platelet production, increased platelet destruction, or dilutional or distributional causes. Drug-induced thrombocytopenias present diagnostic challenges, because many medicines can cause thrombocytopenia and critically ill patients often receive multiple medications. If they suspect type II HIT, clinicians must promptly discontinue all heparin sources, including LMWHs, without awaiting laboratory confirmation, to avoid thrombotic sequelae. Because warfarin anticoagulation induces acquired protein C deficiency, thereby exacerbating the prothrombotic state of type II HIT, warfarin should be withheld until platelet counts increase to more than 100,000/microL and type II HIT is clearly resolving. The presence of a consumptive coagulopathy in the setting of thrombocytopenia supports a diagnosis of
DIC
, not TTP-HUS, and is demonstrated by decreasing serum fibrinogen levels, and increasing TTs, PTs, aPTTs, and fibrin degradation products. Increasing D-dimer, levels are the most specific
DIC
parameter and reflect fibrinolysis of cross-linked fibrin. Elevated PTs or a PTTs can result from the absence of factors or the presence of inhibitors. Clinicians should suspect factor inhibitors when the prolonged PT or aPTT does not correct or only partially corrects following an immediate assay of a 1:1 mix of patient and normal plasma. In addition to factor inhibitors, antiphospholipid antibodies (e.g., lupus anticoagulant) can produce a prolonged aPTT that does not correct with normal plasma but is overcome by adding excess phospholipid or platelets. Paradoxically, a tendency to thrombosis, not bleeding, accompanies lupus anticoagulants and the antiphospholipid antibody syndrome. Transfusion of red blood cells, platelets, or plasma products is sometimes warranted, but clinicians must carefully weigh potential benefits against known risks. In critically ill patients, administering RBCs can enhance oxygen delivery to tissues. Among euvolemic patients who do not have ischemic heart disease, guidelines recommend a transfusion threshold of HGB levels in the range of 6.0 to 8.0 g/dL; patients who have HGB that is at least 10.0 g/dL are unlikely to benefit from blood transfusion. The use of rHuEPO to increase erythropoiesis offers an alternative to RBC transfusion, assuming normal, responsive progenitor cells and adequate iron, folate, and cobalamin stores. Future research should examine whether clinical outcomes from rHuEPO use in critically ill patients are important and cost-effective. Because platelets play an instrumental role in primary hemostasis, platelet transfusions are often important in managing patients who are bleeding or at risk of bleeding with thrombocytopenia or impaired platelet function. Platelet transfusions carry risks, and decisions to transfuse platelets must consider clinical circumstances. Most important, platelet transfusions are generally contraindicated if the underlying disorder is TTP or type II HIT, because platelet transfusion in these settings may fuel thrombosis and worsen clinical signs and symptoms. Plasma products can correct hemostasis when bleeding arises from malfunction, consumption, or underproduction of plasma coagulation proteins. Choice of plasma product for transfusion depends on clinical circumstances. FFP is the most commonly used plasma product to correct clotting factor deficiencies, particularly coagulopathies that are attributable to multiple clotting factor deficiency states as in liver disease,
DIC
, or warfarin anticoagulation.
PCC
or rFVIIa that is administered in small volumes may provide advantages over FFP when coagulopathies require quick reversal without risk of volume overload. Factor concentrates can replace specific factor deficiencies. Recombinant FVIIa bypasses inhibitors to factors VIII and IX and vWF. Use of rFVIIa in managing hemostatic abnormalities from severe liver dysfunction; extensive surgery, trauma, or bleeding; excessive warfarin anticoagulation; and certain platelet disorders requires further study to determine optimal and cost-effective dosing regimens. Recombinant activated protein C reduces mortality from severe sepsis that is associated with organ dysfunction in adults who are at high risk for death (APACHE scores of at least 25). In severe sepsis, levels of protein C decrease, as do fibrinogen and platelet levels. Because of its anticoagulant effect, however, drotrecogin alfa may induce bleeding. Guidelines for drotrecogin alfa use must take into account bleeding risks.
...
PMID:Critical issues in hematology: anemia, thrombocytopenia, coagulopathy, and blood product transfusions in critically ill patients. 1471 Jun 93
Rhabdomyolysis ranges from an asymptomatic illness with elevated creatine kinase levels to a life-threatening condition associated with extreme elevations in creatine kinase, electrolyte imbalances, acute renal failure, and
disseminated intravascular coagulation
. The most common causes are crush injury, overexertion, alcohol abuse, certain medicines, and toxic substances. A number of electrolyte abnormalities and endocrinopathies, including hypothyroidism, thyrotoxicosis, diabetic ketoacidosis, nonketotic hyperosmolar state, and hyperaldosteronism, cause rhabdomyolysis. Rhabdomyolysis and acute renal failure are unusual manifestations of
pheochromocytoma
. There are a few case reports with
pheochromocytoma
presenting rhabdomyolysis and acute renal failure. Herein, we report a case with
pheochromocytoma
crisis presenting with rhabdomyolysis and acute renal failure.
...
PMID:Pheochromocytoma presenting with rhabdomyolysis and acute renal failure: a case report. 2405 40
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