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Query: UMLS:C0012739 (disseminated intravascular coagulation)
8,673 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We have reported a third case of miliary tuberculosis and associated consumption coagulopathy. It is proposed that clotting factors may be locally consumed, thus producing the syndrome of "multifocal vasculopathic coagulation."
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PMID:Miliary tuberculosis and consumption of clotting factors by multifocal vasculopathic coagulation. 50 90

A 53-year-old female patient with ovarian dermatoid cyst and lung tuberculosis had been treated with rifampicin. During repeated rifampicin treatment she developed an acute haemolytic syndrome with haemorrhagic diathesis. Laboratory findings showed that it was caused by disseminated intravascular coagulation. Death ensued despite intensive administration of heparin and Trasylol. It is assumed that the repeated rifampicin application had provoked massive haemolysis by an allergic mechanism leading to thrombofibrinolytic haemorrhagic diathesis.
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PMID:Disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) during superacute haemolysis in a patient with ovarian dermatoid cyst treated with rifampicin. 61 55

A 56-year-old man with histologically and bacteriologically proved disseminated tuberculosis in association with pancytopenia responded to antituberculosis chemotherapy with bacteriologic cure of his tuberculosis and concomitant resolution of the pancytopenia. This association has been generally believed to have a nearly 100 percent mortality. In addition, the patient developed laboratory evidence of disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC). The single and simultaneous occurrence of these two hematologic abnormalities is extremely rare. A number of factors possibly relating to the development of pancytopenia and DIC in conjunction with miliary tuberculosis are briefly discussed.
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PMID:Survival of a patient with pancytopenia and disseminated coagulation associated with miliary tuberculosis. 63 Sep 75

Three patients with miliary tuberculosis developed the adult respiratory distress syndrome. In two patients this complication developed despite treatment with antituberculous drugs. The third patient developed the syndrome, but miliary tuberculosis was not suspected. The presence of disseminated intravascular coagulation in all three cases suggests a possible pathophysiologic relation. Miliary tuberculosis should be considered in patients presenting with adult respiratory distress syndrome of unknown cause.
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PMID:Miliary tuberculosis and adult respiratory distress syndrome. 98 12

A 13-year-old girl was admitted with congestive heart failure, edema, ascites, and jaundice. There was an apical pansystolic murmur of mitral insufficiency and marked cardiomegaly. Her venous pressure was elevated. Despite medical treatment her condition deteriorated, hepatic and renal failure as well as disseminated intravascular coagulation ensued, leading to her death. At post mortem she was found to have rheumatic mitral valvulitis and constrictive pericarditis. The pathologic picture of pericarditis was nonspecific, but in presence of a positive skin test for tuberculosis the latter is considered to be the most likely cause of the pericarditis, nevertheless, rheumatic etiology of pericarditis in this case cannot be excluded. The presence of rheumatic heart disease and cardiomegaly may have led to the exacerbation of symptoms and signs of constrictive pericarditis and severe right heart failure.
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PMID:Rheumatic valvulitis and constrictive pericarditis. Report of case. 118 94

Two patients with tuberculosis complicated with disseminated intravascular coagulation are presented. The first patient had spleenic and mesenteric lymph nodes tuberculosis (accompanied by gastrointestinal symptoms (diarrhoea) lasting for several years) in which DIC was terminal fatal complication. Coagulation disorder was characterized by a decrease of fibrinogen concentration in blood, thrombocytopenia and other disorders as well as haemorrhagic syndrome. The second patient had miliary tuberculosis presented by X-ray changes on the lungs, granuloma in the liver and positive cultures in the sputum. Both laboratory and clinical signs of DIC manifested in the beginning of the disease. Heparin treatment was successful: haemorrhages stopped already 24 hours later, while an increase of fibrinogen concentration and number of platelets in blood proceeded at slower rate. As the patient had overcome the critical period, treatment of the primary disease was successful and led to complete recovery.
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PMID:[Disseminated intravascular coagulation during a course of miliary tuberculosis]. 122 26

Tuberculosis associated hemophagocytic syndrome (HPS) has recently been recognized as a benign reactive histiocytic proliferation with marrow hemophagocytosis. To our knowledge, only five autopsy documented cases have previously been reported. We present here a unique case of the disorder complicated by severe bone marrow failure and disseminated intravascular coagulation. The possible mechanisms of these complications are discussed and it is concluded that the immunological disturbances usually occurring in miliary tuberculosis could play a role in the pathogenesis of HPS.
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PMID:Tuberculosis associated hemophagocytic syndrome complicated with severe bone marrow failure and disseminated intravascular coagulation. 140 39

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)
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PMID:[Clinicopathological study of miliary tuberculosis in patients with hematologic disease]. 237 32

Coagulopathy due to tuberculosis is rare. We believe ours is only the second reported case of cavitary tuberculosis associated with disseminated intravascular coagulation. Our review of all 13 cases to date shows that the patients are generally black, middle-aged, male, alcoholic, and febrile. The tuberculosis is generally military, and is associated with a high mortality. Eight of the patients had associated adult respiratory distress syndrome. Only one (our case) had an acute tuberculous peritonitis. In six cases the coagulopathy began after the start of therapy; steroids did not appear to affect survival. The exact pathophysiologic mechanisms involved in the development of DIC are unknown.
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PMID:Disseminated intravascular coagulation in association with cavitary tuberculosis. 240

We reported a case of 64 a year-old male patient of miliary tuberculosis associated with ARDS, DIC and pneumothorax, who had a history of gastric ulcer and pulmonary tuberculosis. On admission his chief complaints were fever, fatigue, palpitation, appetite loss and weight loss, and most noticeable abnormalities were bleeding from the gastric ulcer and miliary shadow on the chest x-ray film with hypoxemia. On the day after admission to the hospital he was diagnosed as ARDS as he showed severe hypoxemia due to extensive tuberculous infiltration in bilateral lung fields, and treatment with antituberculous drugs and steroids were started. On the third hospital day DIC appeared on laboratory data, Gabexate mesilate (FOY) for DIC and respirator for ARDS were introduced. Two weeks later pulmonary infiltration, PaO2 and general condition were somewhat improved. On the 15th day after admission pneumothorax occurred on the right side, and on the 20th day on the left. Tube drainage of both pleural cavities, and instillation of OK-432 and Fibrinogen HT into the right pleural cavity were done, but it showed no effect. Two months after admission pouring Fibrinogen HT and thrombin into the left B1+2 and right B1 with cannula washing pipe through the instrument channel of bronchoscope was carried out. A few days later air leakage stopped and collapsed lungs were completely expanded. This method is effective in the case of incurable pneumothorax with pulmonary hypofunction.
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PMID:[A case of miliary tuberculosis associated with ARDS, DIC and bilateral pneumothorax]. 259 62


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