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)

An 11-year-old boy was diagnosed as having acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL, L1) in 1987 and underwent treatment with an ALL high-risk protocol (prednisolone, vincristine (VCR), daunorubicin, 1-asparaginase), which resulted in complete remission. In 1990 he developed chronic hepatitis C and received interferon therapy. In December 1994, ALL recurred, and the patient was treated with VCR. He subsequently developed severe hemolysis (Hb 12.5 g/dl-->6.8 g/dl) with increases of indirect bilirubin, AST, and LDH. Furthermore, symptoms resembling a syndrome of inappropriate secretion of ADH (SIADH) and DIC developed. Upon incubation of the patient's red blood cells with VCR in vitro, extreme deformity of the cells was observed. These findings suggested that splenomegaly, due to liver cirrhosis which had developed rapidly from chronic hepatitis C while the patient was in an immunosuppressed state induced by anticancer drugs, had trapped the deformed red blood cells and resulted in severe hemolysis. The patient died on the 165th day after admission due to liver failure.
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PMID:[Severe hemolysis and SIADH-like symptoms induced by vincristine in an ALL patient with liver cirrhosis]. 1119 45

Intravascular lymphoma (IVL) is a rare aggressive disease characterised by the presence of lymphoma cells only in the lumina of small vessels, particularly capillaries. Only about 200 cases have been reported in the world (some of them retrospectively). IVL is predominantly of B-cell lineage origin but occasionally T-cell lineage occurs. Multiple organs may be involved and a variety of clinical presentations have been described. These include nephrotic syndrome, pyrexia and hypertension, breathlessness and haemolytic anaemia, leukopoenia, pancytopoenia and disseminated intravascular coagulation. We report a case of a 38-year-old woman with a highly aggressive clinical course of IVL. She was admitted to the Department of Neurosurgery because of spondylolisthesis of L5-S1 qualified to surgery. During hospitalisation haemolytic anaemia, thrombocytopoenia and splenomegaly were observed and she was admitted to the Department of Haematology for diagnosis. During her staying in the hospital, new symptoms, such as kidney and liver failure, occurred and the central nervous system was involved. The clinical course was very rapid and progressive. Corticosteroid therapy was started but the disease soon led to the fatal outcome. Diagnosis was established at post-mortem examination.
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PMID:Intravascular B-cell lymphoma in a 38-year-old woman: a case report. 1140 Oct 88

Adult onset Still's disease (AOSD), the adult variant of the systemic form of the juvenile rheumatoid arthritis, is an uncommon disorder of unknown origin. Although the pathogenesis has not yet been clarified, an immunologically mediated inflammation occurs in active AOSD. High spiking fever, evanescent maculo-papular skin rash, arthralgias/arthritis, neutrophilic leukocytosis, negative rheumatoid factor and antinuclear antibodies, as well as a marked hyperferritinemia are the major features of AOSD. Sore throat, lymphadenopathies, hepato-splenomegaly, abdominal pain, polyserositis, respiratory distress syndrome, multiple organ dysfunction and disseminated intravascular coagulation may also occur. The clinical course of AOSD is extremely variable and unpredictable and can be divided into three main patterns: a self-limited or monocyclic pattern, a polycyclic or intermittent course, with one or more flares of the disease and complete remission among the episodes, and a chronic course, characterized by persistently active disease, usually due to a chronic, destructive arthritis. Since there are not pathognomonic laboratory parameters or histological findings, the diagnosis of AOSD requires the exclusion of infectious, malignant and autoimmune disorders. Some sets of criteria for classification have been proposed, but so far not validated. The prognosis of AOSD is usually considered relatively benign, although a destructive arthritis may cause severe disability and the multisystemic life-threatening complications of the disease may determine a fatal outcome. Treatment usually consists in nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs and corticosteroids, but a more aggressive approach with disease modifying antirheumatic or immunosuppressive drugs may be required.
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PMID:[Adult onset Still's disease]. 1185 Jun 12

Thrombocytopenia is common in persons infected with relapsing fever Borreliae. We previously showed that the relapsing fever spirochete Borrelia hermsii binds to and activates human platelets in vitro and that, after platelet activation, high-level spirochete-platelet attachment is mediated by integrin alpha IIb beta 3, a receptor that requires platelet activation for full function. Here we established that B hermsii infection of the mouse results in severe thrombocytopenia and a functional defect in hemostasis caused by accelerated platelet loss. Disseminated intravascular coagulation, immune thrombocytopenic purpura, or splenic sequestration did not play a discernible role in this model. Instead, spirochete-platelet complexes were detected in the blood of infected mice, suggesting that platelet attachment by bacteria might result in platelet clearance. Consistent with this, splenomegaly and thrombocytopenia temporally correlated with spirochetemia, and the severity of thrombocytopenia directly correlated with the degree of spirochetemia. Activation of platelets and integrin alpha IIb beta 3 were apparently not required for bacterium-platelet binding or platelet clearance because the bacterium-bound platelets in the circulation were not activated, and platelet binding and thrombocytopenia during infection of beta 3-deficient and wild-type mice were indistinguishable. These findings suggest that thrombocytopenia of relapsing fever is the result of platelet clearance after beta 3-independent bacterial attachment to circulating platelets.
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PMID:Spirochete-platelet attachment and thrombocytopenia in murine relapsing fever borreliosis. 1285 86

We report a 55-year-old male with a diagnosis of intravascular lymphoma and hemophagocytosis. He initially presented with hemolytic anemia and splenomegaly and was successfully treated with oral steroids. His clinical course was later complicated by fever, cytopenias, hypoalbuminemia, disseminated intravascular coagulation, gastrointestinal bleeding and acute tubular necrosis. Results of an extensive investigation for fever of unknown origin were negative. Although the patient was treated aggressively with antimicrobials, transfusion support and dialysis, he expired 3 weeks after hospitalization. Post-mortem analysis revealed large CD30- and CD45-positive lymphoma cells in an intravascular distribution in most of the organs studied. Histopathology of the spleen and bone marrow was significant for fulminant hemophagocytosis.
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PMID:Intravascular lymphoma associated with hemophagocytic syndrome: a rare but aggressive clinical entity. 1465 9

From 1995-2002, 14 patients with predominantly prehepatic, noncirrhotic portal hypertension were evaluated. At presentation, the eight females and six males had a mean age of 9 years (range 2-18). Seven were admitted with gastrointestinal, mostly esophageal bleeding, three with splenomegaly, three with hepato-pulmonary syndrome, and one with hyperammonemia. Imaging studies showed portal vein obstruction in six patients and non-obstructed but frequently anomalous vascular patterns, including hypoplasia of the portal vein, in the remaining eight patients. At the onset, liver function was marginally abnormal in all patients, but thrombocytopenia of approximately 100 x 10(9)/L was consistently observed, probably reflecting chronic mild consumption coagulopathy and hypersplenism. The most striking and frequent histopathologic finding in 25 liver samples, was the presence of hypoplastic portal triads with collapsed portal vein radicles. In contrast, other triads showed markedly distended and misshapen portal vein radicles and likely lymphatics. These two patterns of collapse and distention presumably reflect areas of impaired versus overloaded intrahepatic portal venous flow. Some of the biopsies showed variable portal/sinusoidal fibrosis. Four patients (two with intestinal bleeding, two with hepatopulmonary syndrome) required liver transplants and are doing well. Eight patients are doing well clinically after surgical or spontaneous vascular shunting. Two patients with intestinal bleeding and hepato-pulmonary syndrome, respectively) who had congenital dyskeratosis, underwent bone marrow transplantation and died of nonhepatic-related complications. It is possible to suggest prehepatic causes of portal hypertension even in needle biopsies when collapsed portal vein radicles are present in portal triads, but more than one biopsy sample with larger bore bioptomes may be required to see the changes. Conversely, identifying these changes may suggest to the clinicians the need to work-up a patient for portal hypertension.
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PMID:Pathology of noncirrhotic portal hypertension: clinicopathologic study in pediatric patients. 1470 35

A variety of patient and product-related factors influenced the outcome of 6379 transfusions given to 533 patients in the Trial to Reduce Alloimmunization to Platelets (TRAP). Responses measured were platelet increments, interval between platelet transfusions, and platelet refractoriness. Patient factors that improved platelet responses were splenectomy and increasing patient age. In contrast, at least 2 prior pregnancies, male gender, splenomegaly, bleeding, fever, infection, disseminated intravascular coagulation, increasing height and weight, lymphocytotoxic antibody positivity, an increasing number of platelet transfusions, or receiving heparin or amphotericin were associated with decreased posttransfusion platelet responses. Platelet factors that were associated with improved platelet responses were giving ABO-compatible platelets, platelets stored for 48 hours or less, and giving large doses of platelets while ultraviolet B (UV-B) or gamma irradiation decreased platelet responses. However, in alloimmunized lymphocytoxic antibody-positive patients, the immediate increment to UV-B-irradiated platelets was well maintained, whereas all other products showed substantial reductions. Refractoriness to platelet transfusions developed in 27% of the patients. Platelet refractoriness was associated with lymphocytotoxic antibody positivity, heparin administration, fever, bleeding, increasing number of platelet transfusions, increasing weight, at least 2 pregnancies, and male gender. The only factors that reduced platelet refractoriness rates were increasing the dose of platelets transfused or transfusing filtered apheresis platelets.
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PMID:Factors affecting posttransfusion platelet increments, platelet refractoriness, and platelet transfusion intervals in thrombocytopenic patients. 2671 Mar 53

Here we report a familial cluster of 3 cases of coxsackievirus B3 infection: a recent history of illness in a woman's 3-year-old son with a coxsackievirus B3-positive stool culture indicated that he probably infected his mother at home during her last week of pregnancy. Consequently, she delivered an infected neonate who developed severe hepatitis, disseminated intravascular coagulation, and bilateral intracranial hemorrhage. The neonate remained well for the first 2 days of life. On the third day, he developed fever (39 degrees C) and poor peripheral circulation. On the fourth day, he developed petechiae and bruises over his chest wall and extremities, and prolonged bleeding was observed over venipuncture sites. Investigations revealed severe thrombocytopenia (platelets: 41 x 10(9)/L) and a markedly deranged coagulation profile (prothrombin time: 19 seconds [reference: < 10 seconds]; activated partial thromboplastin time: > 120 seconds [reference: 24.2-37.0 seconds], serum D-dimers: 6722 ng/mL [reference: < 500 ng/mL]), suggestive of disseminated intravascular coagulopathy. Clinical examination revealed yellow sclera, hepatomegaly (5 cm), and splenomegaly (2 cm), consistent with hepatitis. Serial chest radiographs showed bilateral pleural effusions, and an ultrasound of the abdomen demonstrated ascites. An echocardiogram showed normal cardiac structure and good contractility of both ventricles. However, a cranial ultrasound revealed bilateral grade 2 intraventricular hemorrhages. Serum C-reactive protein increased to 33.9 mg/L. Liver-function tests were also markedly deranged at this time, with maximum values for serum alanine transferase, bilirubin, alkaline phosphatase, and ammonia concentration of 1354 IU/L, 258 micromol/L, 189 IU/L, and 147 micromol/L, respectively. Serum glucose levels were normal. Over the next 3 days, his fever subsided, and his liver function and clotting profile normalized by day 13 after onset of illness. A stool sample from the older brother, collected 14 days after his onset of illness at home, was positive for coxsackievirus B3 by both virus culture and enterovirus reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction. He had neutralizing coxsackievirus B3 antibody titers of 1:2560 and 1:1280 on days 14 and 28 after his onset of illness, respectively. No virus was cultured from the mother's stool sample, collected 5 days after her onset of illness, but the enterovirus polymerase chain reaction was positive and maternal sera neutralized the coxsackievirus B3 isolated from the neonate. The maternal sera also showed a more than fourfold rise in antibody titer from 1:80 to 1:640 on days 5 and 16 after her onset of illness, respectively. Neonatal antibody titers also showed a more than fourfold rise from < 1:80 to 1:2560 on days 1 and 21 after his onset of illness, respectively. This demonstrates that both the mother and the neonate had had recent coxsackievirus B3 infections. Serially collected neonatal throat swab and stool samples were culture negative for enterovirus by 4 and 8 days after his onset of illness, respectively. However, enterovirus RNA remained detectable by reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction in these samples for considerably longer, only becoming undetectable by 16, 23, and 41 days after his onset of illness. We show that even mild household infections may have potentially serious consequences for pregnant women and their infants.
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PMID:Probable intrafamilial transmission of coxsackievirus b3 with vertical transmission, severe early-onset neonatal hepatitis, and prolonged viral RNA shedding. 1690 22

Clinical observations of Babesia canis infection in 63 dogs during a 1-year period are summarised, demonstrating the pathogenicity of the Babesia strain endemic in Hungary. Most patients had babesiosis in the spring and autumn, correlating with the seasonal activity of ticks. Male animals appeared in higher numbers, probably due to an overrepresentation of outdoor dogs. Uncomplicated babesiosis was diagnosed in 32 cases. The disease affected dogs of any age in this study. Symptoms were similar to those published from other parts of the world: lethargy, fever, splenomegaly, pallor, icterus, haemoglobinuria and presence of ticks were the most common observations. Thrombocytopenia, lymphopenia and neutropenia were frequent haemogram changes. Imidocarb appeared to be highly effective in eliminating the Babesia infection. Thirty-one animals demonstrated babesiosis with complications. Most Rottweilers (7/9) developed complicated disease. Old age was a risk factor for multiple complications. Multiple organ manifestations had poor prognosis. Hepatopathy (44%), pancreatitis (33%), acute renal failure (ARF; 31%) and disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC; 24%) were frequent complications, while immune-mediated haemolytic anaemia (IMHA; 10%), acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS; 6%) and cerebral babesiosis (3%) were rarely observed. There was a significant difference between the mean age of dogs having uncomplicated disease, babesiosis with a single complication and babesiosis with multiple complications (3.4, 4.8 and 8.6 years, respectively, p < 0.001). The recovery rate (78, 68 and 25%, respectively, p = 0.005) and mortality rate (3, 21 and 67%, respectively, p < 0.001) also tended to differ significantly in these groups. Systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS) and DIC are two possible pathways leading to multiple organ dysfunction syndrome (MODS) in babesiosis. DIC was found to predict MODS more sensitively in this study than SIRS: there were 6 animals developing MODS out of 11 identified with DIC, while only 5 dogs developed MODS out of 22 having SIRS.
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PMID:Clinical manifestations of canine babesiosis in Hungary (63 cases). 1702 Jan 40

Thrombocytopenia is frequently observed in vivax malaria but the exact mechanism has not been elucidated. We studied 27 cases of acute vivax malaria out of which 24 cases had thrombocytopenia. This was the most common hematological finding. None had bleeding from any site. Anaemia and splenomegaly were not present in any of the cases. Platelet counts reverted to normal on treatment. Other causes of thrombocytopenia were ruled out by complete history and physical examination, dengue serology and blood culture. DIC was ruled out by peripheral smear examination and measurement of FDP levels. Our study stresses the importance of thrombocytopenia as an early indicator for acute malaria; a finding that is frequent and present even before anemia and splenomegaly set in. The possible mechanisms leading to thrombocytopenia in malaria have been discussed which include immune mechanisms, oxidative stress, alterations in splenic functions and a direct interaction between plasmodium and platelets.
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PMID:Thrombocytopenia--an indicator of acute vivax malaria. 1718 38


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