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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 cases of nine children who survived the acute stage of meningococcal septicemia and secondary
disseminated intravascular coagulation
were reviewed. All of the children had major orthopaedic problems as a result of the acute disease. Detailed histological studies were performed on specimens of bone and cartilage, obtained when these patients had either acute amputation for gangrene or subsequent revision for a chondro-osseous deformity. In the specimens that were obtained from the children who had acute gangrene, the histological changes included small-vessel thrombi, osteonecrosis, subperiosteal new-bone formation, cortical disruption, cellular disorganization in the physis, and medullary inflammation. These findings were compatible with a combination of inflammation (acute osteomyelitis) and ischemia. In the specimens that were obtained during revision of the amputation, three years or more after the initial infectious or ischemic process, the clinically relevant findings involved the epiphyses and physes. The growth plates showed variable permanent ischemic damage. Bone bridges connecting the
epiphysis
and metaphysis were observed in various stages of formation, including several early bridges with involvement of only the physis and metaphysis. Endosteal and cortical bone, in contrast, showed complete recovery with no evidence of permanent ischemic damage. We concluded that children who survive meningococcal septicemia are at high risk for complex orthopaedic problems, both acute and chronic. The
disseminated intravascular coagulation
and focal infections of the acute phase are primarily responsible for the vascular injuries to the growing chondro-osseous tissues. Ischemic changes also selectively involve the physeal circulation, but may take several years to adversely affect longitudinal and transverse growth of bone.
...
PMID:Chondro-osseous growth abnormalities after meningococcemia. A clinical and histopathological study. 250 9
Bacterial endotoxic reactions can cause osteonecrosis in humans by
disseminated intravascular coagulation
. The authors first used a combination of the Shwartzman reaction and corticoid injections in rabbits to develop a new animal model of osteonecrosis. This model showed a significantly higher incidence and wider area of osteonecrosis in the femur and humerus than that found in rabbits with either Shwartzman reaction or steroid injection alone. Osteonecrosis was observed in several foci that were distributed from the diaphysis to the
epiphysis
in both bones. Histologically, the bone marrow cells underwent necrosis, whereas the bone trabeculae demonstrated either empty lacunae or pycnotic nuclei of osteocytes. Exogenous steroids appeared to potentiate the Shwartzman reaction and the magnitude of osteonecrosis, perhaps by increasing endothelial damage and hypercoagulability of those intraosseous and extraosseous vessels that subsequently thrombosed. This model may not only be useful in clarifying the etiology and early pathogenesis of human osteonecrosis after corticoid therapy, but also in designing pharmaceuticals for prevention and early treatment.
...
PMID:Corticosteroid enhances the experimental induction of osteonecrosis in rabbits with Shwartzman reaction. 763 12