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)

Clinical, laboratory and pathomorphological investigations evidence for close relationships between acute infectious inflammatory conditions of the prostate and thrombohemorrhagic complications arising both locally and systemically. All these postoperative complications manifesting clinically as acute prostatitis, epididymo-orchitis, urosepsis, bacteriotoxic shock, bleeding, thrombosis and embolism, latent or marked DIC syndrome have underlying local infectious-inflammatory process (postoperative acute prostatitis). Preoperative detection of local infection (concomitant chronic prostatitis), monitoring of hemocoagulation, antibacterial and antiinflammatory therapy of chronic prostatitis and normalization of blood rheology improve surgical outcomes in prostatic adenoma and lead to less frequent occurrence of both acute inflammatory and thrombohemorrhagic complications.
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PMID:[The relationship of postoperative thrombotic-hemorrhagic complications to the local acute inflammatory process in patients with prostatic adenoma]. 754 Mar 39

A 65-year-old man with diabetes mellitus reporting fever and urination disturbance on a flight from Bangkok back to Japan in July 2003 was admitted elsewhere for acute prostatitis. Despite intravenous antibiotics, his condition deteriorated. On admission to our hospital, he suffered from respiratory failure, with laboratory data showing disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC). Computed tomography (CT) shows infiltrative and nodular shadows in both lung fields and low-density areas in the left kidney and prostate gland, consistent with pneumonia and abscesses in these organs. He also developed broad osteomyelitis in the right lower extremity with cellulitis and arthritis in the right hand, knee, and foot. Blood, urine, and joint fluid culture all yielded Burkholderia pseudomallei, so he was diagnosed with melioidosis. Treatment was started with meropenem and minocycline, then meropenem was changed to imipenem. His symptoms gradually improved after ciprofloxacin was added, so all intravenous antibiotics were discontinued and he underwent oral treatment with chloramphenicol, minocycline, and sulfamethoxazole/trimethoprim in September 2003. He developed fever again, however, and oral therapy was discontinued and intravenous antibiotics restarted. After resolution of fever, oral maintenance therapy was initiated again with levofloxacin and minocycline in October, and his condition remained stable. After discharge in April 2004, he has been followed up with no evidence of relapse. This is considered to be the seventh case of melioidosis reported in Japan. Our patient manifested multiple organ lesions with sepsis and DIC, and was difficult to treat, but clinical symptoms improved in long-term antibiotic administration. With travelers to Southeast Asia increasing, greater attention must be paid to imported infectious diseases, such as melioidosis.
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PMID:[A Japanese case of melioidosis presenting as multiple organ lesions accompanied by sepsis and disseminated intravascular coagulation, after a visit to Thailand]. 1756 19