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Query: UMLS:C0012739 (
disseminated intravascular coagulation
)
8,673
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Thirty-six children with duodenal ulcer were examined for the coagulation and thrombocytic components of hemostasis. Use was made of the new coagulologic research methods based on administration of the synthetic tri- and tetrapeptides containing a chromoform group. The high sensitivity of the synthetic peptides enables the use of plasma in high dilutions, owing to which the effect of inhibitors is decreased and a small amount of blood is only required, being of paramount importance in carrying out serial tests. In acute ulcer 1/3 of the children show the signs of the
DIC syndrome
compensated at the expense of the high content of anticoagulants. At the same time 4 patients were discovered to have coagulologic disorders characteristic of Willebrand's disease (3 cases) and
thrombasthenia
(1 case). The coagulologic alterations should be taken into consideration in treatment administration, since the compensated
DIC syndrome
untreated by anticoagulant therapy aggravates the course of the ulcerous process and gives rise to hemorrhagic diathesis. Meanwhile in children with hemorrhagic diathesis, peptic ulcer may cause severe, life-threatening hemorrhages.
...
PMID:[Blood aggregation in duodenal ulcer]. 186 48
Platelet abnormalities associated with hepatobiliary diseases include increased (thrombocytosis) and decreased (thrombocytopenia) numbers of platelets as well as abnormalities in function (thrombocytopathy or
thrombasthenia
). Hepatic diseases that are accompanied by platelet abnormalities include hepatitis, cirrhosis, portal hypertension, and neoplastic disorders both benign and malignant. The objective of this work is to examine the platelet abnormalities that occur with a variety of hepatobiliary disorders. Thrombocytosis is seen as a reactive entity following splenectomy. Thrombocytopenia is associated with hypersplenism, dysproteinemias and liver disease related
disseminated intravascular coagulation
(
DIC
). Qualitative platelet abnormalities are found in hepatic failure, liver diseases associated with high or low levels of lipid, and with medications given for a variety of hepatocellular diseases. Clinically common and significant platelet abnormalities associated with liver disease are thrombocytopenia secondary to portal hypertension and the thrombasthenias following metabolic changes and/or therapeutic interventions of liver disease.
...
PMID:Platelet abnormalities in hepatobiliary diseases. 218 3
The clinical value of a new in vitro test of hemostasis, which we have called Filter Bleeding Time (FBT), was determined in 59 patients referred because of a suspected bleeding disorder. FBT is based on the progressive slowing of the drop rate of citrated blood through a filter of woven Dacron under constant pressure as platelet aggregates occlude the filter. The value for FBT is defined as the time when the blood drop interval has reached 1 minute. The Mayo modification of the Ivy bleeding time (IBT) was performed in all patients; platelet response to ADP, collagen, epinephrine and arachidonate was performed in 24 patients. In 30 normal volunteers FBT measured 1-3 hr after venipuncture was 2.8 +/- 1.5 (means +/- 1SD) min. The FBT was prolonged in 3 of 3 patients with
Glanzmann's thrombasthenia
, 2 with
disseminated intravascular coagulation
, 1 with chronic lymphocytic leukemia, 1 with myelofibrosis, and 1 who had taken aspirin. In 6 patients FBT was prolonged while IBT was normal: 4 after taking aspirin, 2 with polycythemia vera. All 6 had reduced platelet aggregation (PA) to ADP (5 microM), collagen (2 mg/ml), epinephrine (5 microM) and/or arachidonate (1.7 mM). In 3 patients FBT was normal while IBT was abnormal: 1 with
disseminated intravascular coagulation
, 2 undiagnosed; 1 of these 3 had abnormal PA. Of 6 patients with von Willebrand's disease, FBT was prolonged in 5 and borderline in 1; IBT was prolonged in 3, normal in 1, and not done in 2 infants.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Clinical evaluation of a new test of hemostasis: the Filter Bleeding Time. 674 May 68
The role of the blood platelets in the aetiogenesis of arterial lesions has been underlined in recent years by studies of platelet elastase and above all the mitogenic factor of smooth muscle cells. A truly thrombogenic theory of atherosclerosis can now be envisaged. In the context of arterial thromboses, it is interaction between the damaged vessel wall, the lesion most often being atherosclerosis, and blood platelets which gives rise to the thrombus. In certain conditions such as diabetes abnormalities in the interaction between platelets and vessel walls may favour the development of vascular lesions and thromboses. With regard to venous thrombosis, the participation of the vessel and/or platelets is less clear. However, recently described platelet procoagulant activities could activate coagulation mechanisms. Knowledge of diseases of primary haemostasis has benefited from studies of platelet-vessel interaction. Whilst the spontaneous haemorrhagic syndrome of major thrombocytopaenia remains mysterious, platelet membrane molecular abnormalities in thrombopathies such as Bernard Soulier syndrome or
thrombasthenia
offer an explanation for their mechanisms. By their interaction with the vessel, platelets finally participate in mechanisms of inflammation, immunological conflicts,
disseminated intravascular coagulation
and metastatic dissemination.
...
PMID:[Interactions between the platelets and the vessel wall. Part 2: physiopathology (author's transl)]. 746 76
Any oral and maxillo-facial surgical treatment, however urgent it may be, must not include pathological states in which the patient's life may be particularly at risk as, for example, with
Disseminated Intravascular Coagulation
(
DIC
) or throm-botic thrombocytopenic purpura. In this article the authors present the result of studies carried out on the nosology of thrombocytopathy from an odontostomatological point of view. Thrombocytopathy can be divided into two groups: the first including the pathologies with a predominant defective number of thrombocytes (i.e.: thrombocytopenia, thrombocythemia, thrombocyto-sis), the second including forms with predominant qualitative defects (commonly known as thrombocytopathies). The authors, after having presented in short the physiopathologic functions of thrombocytes, illustrate the clinical and therapeutic aspects of the most important thrombocytopathies. Morbus Maculosus Werhofii,
Glanzmann's disease
, Bernard-Soulier syndrome, thrombocytopathies from defective reaction of release, Thrombocytopathies from defective procoagulant activity of blood plaques, thrombocytopathies in linkage to other genetic anomalies, von Willebrand's pseudodisease and a lot of acquired thrombocytopathies are identified. In the last part the authors illustrate the most opportune clinical steps corresponding to the most important thrombocytopathies. The results obtained suggest the necessity of keeping to the management that was described, Actually a low percentage of accidents occurred only when the above-mentioned clinical processes were completely performed.
...
PMID:[Management of patients with coagulation disorder in oral and maxillofacial surgery. I. Management of patients with hypocoagulation caused by primary thrombocytopathy]. 917 18
Acquired
Glanzmann's thrombasthenia
is an uncommon event in association with leukemia. The authors describe a patient with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) who presented with severe hemorrhagic syndrome, without
disseminated intravascular coagulation
. The patient's course was complicated by the occurrence of severe hemorrhagic episodes, with a
thrombasthenia
-like profile, requiring multiple transfusions with packed red cells, platelets, and fresh-frozen plasma. Biological explorations detected anti-GPIIb/IIIa complex antibodies. The patient finally died with refractory disease and persistent bleeding. This case is the first reported of autoantibodies to GPIIb/IIIa in ALL. Such paraneoplastic syndrome is potentially responsible for severe life-threatening hemorrhage.
...
PMID:Acquired Glanzmann's thrombasthenia associated with acute lymphoblastic leukemia. 1621 60
The process of fibrin clot formation is a series of complex and well-regulated reactions involving blood vessels, platelets, procoagulant plasma proteins, natural inhibitors, and fibrinolytic enzymes. Vasculitis can be caused by a variety of different agents as bacteria, viruses, protozoal, rickettsial organisms, toxic, drugs, medications, and neoplasms. The most common cause of vasculitis is the purpura hemorrhagica, which is associated with exposure to
Streptococcus equi
ssp.
equi
or less commonly, equine influenza. Deficiencies or defects of the hemostatic components may result in bleeding and/or thrombosis. Inherited alterations of primary hemostasis (von Willebrand disease: vWD and
Glanzmann's
thrombasthenia
: GT) and of secondary hemostasis (hemophilia A and prekallikrein: PK deficiency) are scarcely reported in equine clinic. On the contrary, acquired alterations of primary and secondary hemostasis are commonly found. They include thrombocytopenia, platelet dysfunction due to the administration of some drugs and targeted antiplatelet agents, decreased factor synthesis (liver disease or deficiency of vitamin K), release of inactive factors, inhibition of factor activity, or excessive consumption and depletion of factors (platelets, coagulation factors, and anticoagulants factors as antithrombin (AT) and protein C).
Disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC)
is the most common and complex hemostatic disorder in horses and appears to be associated with sepsis, inflammatory and ischemic gastrointestinal tract disorders and other systemic severe diseases. These alterations are commonly found in patients in intensive care units.
...
PMID:Clinical and laboratorial description of the differential diagnoses of hemostatic disorders in the horse. 3236 18
Platelets play such an important role in the process of thrombosis that patients with thrombocytopenia generally have an increased risk of bleeding. However, abnormal thrombotic events can sometimes occur in patients with thrombocytopenia, which is unusual and inexplicable. The treatments for thrombocytopenia and thromboembolism are usually contradictory. This review introduces the mechanisms of thromboembolism in patients with different types of thrombocytopenia and outlines treatment recommendations for the prevention and treatment of thrombosis. According to the cause of thrombocytopenia, this article addresses four etiologies, including inherited thrombocytopenia (Myh9-related disease, ANKRD26-associated thrombocytopenia,
Glanzmann thrombasthenia
, Bernard-Soulier syndrome), thrombotic microangiopathy (thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura, atypical hemolytic uremic syndrome, hemolytic uremic syndrome, Hemolysis Elevated Liver enzymes and Low Platelets syndrome,
disseminated intravascular coagulation
), autoimmune-related thrombocytopenia (immune thrombocytopenic purpura, antiphospholipid syndrome, systemic lupus erythematosus), and acquired thrombocytopenia (Infection-induced thrombocytopenia and drug-induced thrombocytopenia, heparin-induced thrombocytopenia). We hope to provide more evidence for clinical applications and future research.
...
PMID:Why thromboembolism occurs in some patients with thrombocytopenia and treatment strategies. 3309 4