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

Fifty-two premature, low birth weight infants presented mainly in the first week of life with sudden manifestations of intestinal ileus and an x-ray picture of pneumatosis intestinalis. Twenty-two of 32 patients treated with gastric decompression, antibiotics, intensive supportive therapy and intravenous hyperalimentation survived. Twenty other patients had progression of their disease and required operation. Twelve of these patients survived. Review of this material indicated that some medically treated patients might have survived if they had been operated upon. Indications for operation included free perforation and clinical signs of deterioration. Abdominal physical findings and x-rays were not reliable except as signs of far advanced pathology. Confirmation of ascites by paracentesis and gram stain of fluid was helpful when present. If patients were adequately treated and then developed sudden hyponatremia or progressive acidosis, they invariably had gangrenous bowel and required operation. The most striking finding was that a sudden, profound drop in the platelet count to levels below 100,000 reliably predicted the presence of gangrenous bowel and the need for operation. Other clotting studies indicated that disseminated intravascular coagulation is an important accompaniment of NNE with the complication of bowel gangrene prior to perforation. Gastrostomy and resection of involved bowel with staged anastomosis proved to be the most successful form of surgical management. Overall suvival was 66 per cent.
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PMID:Necrotizing enterocolitis in the newborn: operative indications. 116 56

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.
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PMID:The treatment of pheochromocytoma associated with pseudo-obstruction and perforation of the colon, hepatic failure, and DIC. 198 Mar 22

Since 1984 the peritoneovenous shunt has been installed in 33 patients (10 females - 30.3%; 23 males - 69.7%) of the average age of 54 +/- 8, all in the phase of therapeutically resistant ascites (alcoholic cirrhosis 28 - 84.85%; 4 - 12.12% posthepatitic cirrhosis; and 1 - 3.03% hepatic amyloidosis). The control group consisted of 39 patients (11 females - 28.2% and 28 males - 71.8%) treated in an identical time span with the strict conduction of medicament-diet therapy. The aim of this study was to check the value of this method on our own clinical-patient material, and therefore establish the incidence of complications. By the use of a unique protocol we followed mortality, morbidity, body weight, belly circumference, diuresis, the ultrasonographic finding of the abdominal cavity and the complications which appeared. Out of the group operated on 19 (57%) of the patients died, and so did all the control group patients as well. The average life duration was 275 +/- 810 days in the group operated on, and 44 +/- 29 (p less than 0.005) in the control group. All those alive (14.33-42.42%) lived longer than six months. Six patients lived longer than one year (42.85%), 4 (28.47%) longer than two years, and one (7.14%) longer than three years. There is a statistically significant decrease in body weight, belly circumference, diuresis increase and the consequent ascites withdrawal. DIC occurred in 2 patients, shunt malposition in 2, saccular dilatation in 1, plastic peritonitis in 6, and ileus in 1 patient. Not one of the listed complications resulted by death.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Therapy of resistant ascites using the peritoneojugular (Leveen shunt)]. 228 15

A 30-year-old woman in the 36th week of her second pregnancy, suddenly developed jaundice with remarkable liver necrosis, accompanied by generalized bleeding due to disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC). She underwent a caesarean and a dead foetus was extracted from the uterus. Heparin and frozen plasma infusion resulted in a prompt recovery from the haemostatic disorder. The course of the disease involved the successive appearance of haemorrhagic shock, intestinal ileus and pulmonary embolism all of which she recovered from. The liver biopsy showed severe cholestasis without derangement of the lobular structure. Hypotheses of acute veno-occlusive disease caused by the DIC, and acute fatty liver of pregnancy are discussed.
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PMID:[Disseminated intravascular coagulation and acute hepatic necrosis at the end of pregnancy. A case report]. 262 77

The authors report on an infant of three weeks of age, suffering from mycotic septicaemia (Candida), in the course of which the syndrome of disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) occurred. The digestive expression of DIC was represented by numerous intestinal intramural haematomas, one of which was large enough to produce the clinical signs of mechanical ileus. The aetiology of the intestinal intramural haematoma is discussed and its relatively frequent occurrence in infants with DIC is stressed.
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PMID:Obstructive intramural haematoma--a rare cause of mechanical ileus in children. 368 37

A 44-year-old man received high-dose chemotherapy with carboplatin, etoposide and cyclophosphamide followed by autologous peripheral-blood stem-cell transplantation for treatment of refractory nonseminomatous testicular cancer (seminoma plus choriocarcinoma). The patient developed fever, watery diarrhea and abdominal pain at 10 days after the initiation of high-dose chemotherapy. Radiological examinations revealed adynamic ileus with thickened colon and small bowel wall and increasing ascites over the next 3 days. The patient subsequently suffered from disseminated intravascular coagulation, renal failure and hyperbilirubinemia despite systemic antibiotic therapy. Intensive medical care could barely avoid the fatal outcome. Neutropenic colitis has been recognized as a complication of acute leukemia or aplastic anemia. The present case indicates that this serious gastrointestinal complication can occur under profound neutropenic conditions induced by intensive chemotherapy for solid cancer.
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PMID:Neutropenic colitis as a complication of high-dose chemotherapy for refractory testicular cancer. 979 33

A 37-yr-old man underwent an open drainage operation for severe acute pancreatitis and received respiratory ventilation support for 4 mo because of respiratory failure based on disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) and septic shock. Under intensive care, he sometimes had bloody diarrhea for about 6 wk. Colonoscopic findings suggested that the bleeding had derived from the small intestine. The patient then gradually recovered from acute pancreatitis and was discharged from the hospital. Thereafter, he suffered relapses of ileus and his symptoms progressively worsened. The patient underwent a second operation about 2 yr after the onset of acute pancreatitis. At celiotomy, multiple stenoses of the distal ileum measuring about 60 cm in length were found and the segment was resected. The resected specimen demonstrated six separate circumferential strictures and shallow ulcerations. Histologically, multiple ulcerations were restricted to the mucosa and were accompanied by marked submucosal edema and fibrosis. The mucosa between the ulcers revealed chronic regenerative changes: intimal thickening of small mesenteric arteries causing luminal narrowing and organized thrombosis in small mesenteric veins. Therefore, these were considered to be a series of segmental ischemic lesions. Note that delayed ischemic stricture of the small intestine may occur as a chronic complication of acute pancreatitis.
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PMID:Ischemic stricture of the small intestine associated with acute pancreatitis. 987 59

We report a case of a 53-year-old male with Vibrio cholerae non-O1 (serotype O19) infection, resulting in perforative pan-peritonitis. The patient had a history of gastric cancer and a gastrectomy was performed one year prior. The patient had previously been admitted with nausea and vomiting and was diagnosed with a sub-ileus condition. He was provisionally discharged when his condition improved and during that period he ate raw fish caught locally in Nagasaki Prefecture, and several hours later he experienced a sudden onset of severe abdominal pain and nausea and on diagnosis of pan-peritonitis an emergency resection of the transverse colon was performed. We subsequently isolated Vibrio cholerae non-O1 from the patient's peritoneal fluid and stool. He died of multiple organ failure three weeks later despite intensive chemotherapeutic care and treatment for shock and disseminated intravascular coagulation. The strain of Vibrio cholerae non-O1 isolated was non-toxigenic but hemolytic with hyper-producing of metalloprotease.
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PMID:[The characterization of Vibrio cholerae non-O1 strain causing perforative pan-peritonitis]. 1155 33

A 76-year-old man was admitted to our hospital with abdominal pain, nausea, and vomiting. The patient was diagnosed as ileus by abdominal radiography, which showed an enlarged bowel and an air-fluid level. Computed tomography of the abdomen showed a thickened intestinal wall. His general status suddenly worsened, and he was placed on a respirator and catecholamines to prevent acute respiratory distress syndrome, septic shock, and disseminated intravascular coagulation. He had continuous fresh anal bleeding. Total colonoscopy showed bloody stool originating from the ileum. Emergency operation was performed for hemorrhagic shock under general anesthesia. Intraoperative jejunal endoscopy revealed deep linear ulcers with bleeding in the jejunum, and 30 cm of the jejunum was resected. Histopathologic examination revealed cytomegalic cells with intranuclear inclusion bodies in the tissues surrounding the ulcers, and it was diagnosed as cytomegaloviral enterocolitis with hemophagocytic syndrome in a non-compromised adult.
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PMID:Virus-associated hemophagocytic syndrome and hemorrhagic jejunal ulcer caused by cytomegalovirus infection in a non-compromised host; a case report of unusual entity. 1508 89

Hepatic resection is the main treatment modality for hepatic tumors in childhood. Advances in diagnostic technique, preoperative preparation, surgical technique, and postoperative management increased the success rate. The aim of this study is to report our experience in hepatic lobectomy, which is relatively rare procedure in childhood. Medical records of 25 patients who underwent hepatic lobectomy between January 1977 and June 2002 were reviewed retrospectively. Age, gender, diagnosis, physical examination findings, results of preoperative laboratory investigations, radiological examination, resectability criteria, preoperative biopsies, chemotherapies, radiotherapies, postoperative pathological results, incisions, operation technique, intraoperative transfusions, drains used, antibiotic prophylaxes, and intraoperative and postoperative complications were evaluated for all patients. Out of 25 patients with hepatic tumor seven patients with hepatoblastoma and four patients with hepatocellular carcinoma were given 5.7 +/- 0.3 cycles of chemotherapy before the operation. Right lobectomy (n = 12), left lobectomy (n = 5), extended left lobectomy (n = 4), and extended right lobectomy (n = 3) and right lobectomy with enucleation of two masses from left lobe (n = 1) were performed. Intraoperative blood transfusion of 30.7+/-6.0 ml/kg body weight was necessary. Pathological examination of resected tumors revealed hepatoblastoma (n=11), mesenchymal hamartoma (n = 5), hepatocellular carcinoma (n = 4), hemangioendothelioma (n=1), malignant mesenchymal tumor (n = 1), hemangioma (n = 1), cyst adenoma (n = 1), and metastasis of cellular mesoblastic nephroma (n = 1). Patients were observed in the intensive care unit for 3.4 +/- 0.3 days. Postoperative complications were sepsis (n = 1), disseminated intravascular coagulation (n = 2), fever (n = 3), jaundice (n = 3), intraabdominal abscess (n = 3), ileus (n = 2), and subdiaphragmatic abscess with pleural effusion (n = 1). Hepatic lobectomy is a major operation, which is feasible yielding curative results in children. Safe hepatic resections with acceptable blood loss can be performed by a technique relying on good anatomic dissection and surgical control.
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PMID:Hepatic lobectomies in children: experience of a center in the light of changing management of malignant liver tumors. 1639 9


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