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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 analyzed the clinical and laboratory characteristics of 50 patients with catastrophic antiphospholipid syndrome (APS) (5 from our clinics and 45 from a MEDLINE computer-assisted review of the literature from 1992 through 1996). Thirty-three (66%) patients were female and 17 (34%) were male. Twenty-eight (56%) patients had primary APS, 15 (30%) had defined systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), 6 (12%) had "lupus-like" syndrome, and 1 (2%) had rheumatoid arthritis. Mean age of patients in this series was 38 +/- 14 years (range, 11-74 yr). Three (6%) patients developed the clinical picture of catastrophic APS under the age of 15 years, and 11 (22%) were 50 years old or more. In 11 (22%) patients, precipitating factors contributed to the development of catastrophic APS (infections in 3, drugs in 3, minor surgical procedures in 3, anticoagulation withdrawal in 2, and hysterectomy in 1). The presentation of the acute multi-organ failure was usually complex, involving multiple organs simultaneously or in a very short period of time. The majority of patients manifested microangiopathy--that is, occlusive vascular disease affecting predominantly small vessels of organs, particularly kidney, lungs, brain, heart, and liver--with a minority of patients experiencing only large vessel occlusions. Thrombocytopenia was reported in 34 (68%) patients, hemolytic anemia in 13 (26%), disseminated intravascular coagulation in 14 (28%), and schistocytes in 7 (14%). The following antibodies were detected: lupus anticoagulant (94%), anticardiolipin antibodies (94%), anti-dsDNA (87% of patients with SLE), antinuclear antibodies (58%), anti-Ro/SS-A (8%), anti-RNP (8%), and anti-La/SS-B (2%). Anticoagulation was used in 70% of the patients, steroids in 70%, plasmapheresis in 40%, cyclophosphamide in 34%, intravenous gammaglobulins in 16%, and splenectomy in 4%. Most patients, however, received a combination of nonsurgical therapies. Death occurred in 25 of the 50 (50%) patients. In most, cardiac problems seemed to be the major cause of death. In several of these, respiratory failure was also present, usually due to acute respiratory distress syndrome and diffuse alveolar hemorrhage. Among the 20 patients who received the combination of anticoagulation, steroids, and plasmapheresis or intravenous gammaglobulins, recovery occurred in 14 (70%) patients. The use of ancrod and defibrotide appeared to be effective in the 2 respective patients in whom they were used.
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PMID:Catastrophic antiphospholipid syndrome. Clinical and laboratory features of 50 patients. 965 31

Infants with respiratory distress syndrome (RDS) undergo hemodynamic alterations in both the pulmonary and systemic vascular beds that predispose these infants to microvascular damage. In addition, disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) is frequently encountered in preterm infants with advanced RDS. In preterm infants with RDS, the plasma status is not known. Therefore, we studied plasma thrombomodulin levels in 25 preterm infants who did or did not develop RDS within the first few hours of life. The mean plasma thrombomodulin levels were found to be similar in the two groups (8.12 +/- 10.20 ng/ml vs. 18.30 +/- 22.77 ng/ml, respectively, p > 0.05 by Mann-Whitney U Test). It seems that plasma thrombomodulin levels are normal in the earlier stages of RDS before the occurrence of severe vascular damage and DIC due to hypoxemia.
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PMID:Plasma thrombomodulin levels in early respiratory distress syndrome. 967 33

Clinical Confusion between human babesiosis and malaria is often reported in the literature. Headache, fever, chills, nausea, vomiting, myalgia, altered mental status, disseminated intravascular coagulation, anaemia with dyserythropoiesis, hypotension, respiratory distress, and renal insufficiency are common to both diseases. This remarkable similarity is not restricted to the human host. In the mouse, for example, the histological changes wrought by fatal malaria (Plasmodium vinckei) and babesiosis (Babesia rhodaini) are identical, and parasites of both genera cross-protect. Malarial disease pathogenesis is now generally associated with excessive production of pro-inflammatory cytokines , such as tumour necrosis factor. While this concept has not yet been examined in babesiosis, indirect evidence arises from noting the parasite density at which illness occurs in primary infections caused by either organism. Naive mice tolerate high loads of malarial or babesial parasites before they become ill, and are also tolerant to endotoxicity, which is mediated by these same cytokines. In contrast, humans require very much smaller loads of Plasmodium or Babesia spp. before becoming ill, and likewise are very sensitive to endotoxin, the harmful effects of which are mediated by the pro-inflammatory cytokines. For these reasons, as discussed in this review, the diseases caused by these two genera of intra-erythrocytic protozoan parasites will probably prove to be conceptually identical.
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PMID:Do babesiosis and malaria share a common disease process? 968 99

Reactive oxygen species (ROS) are constantly produced in human beings under normal circumstances. Antioxidant systems help defend the body against ROS but may be overwhelmed during periods of oxidative stress, which can cause lipid peroxidation, damage to DNA, and cell death. Critical illness, such as sepsis or adult respiratory distress syndrome, can drastically increase the production of ROS and lead to oxidative stress. Sources of oxidative stress during critical illness include activation of the phagocytic cells of the immune system (the respiratory burst), the production of nitric oxide by the vascular endothelium, the release of iron and copper ions and metalloproteins, and the vascular damage caused by ischemia reperfusion. Only indirect measurements of ROS are available, but the presence of oxidative stress in critical illness is supported by clinical studies. In general, serum antioxidant vitamin concentrations seem to decrease and measures of oxidative stress seem to increase in critically ill populations. Oxidative stress has been associated with sepsis, shock, a need for mechanical ventilation, organ dysfunction, acute respiratory distress syndrome, disseminated intravascular coagulation, surgery, and the presence of an acute-phase response. In addition, higher levels of oxidative stress seem to occur in patients with more notable injuries. Dietary supplementation with antioxidant vitamins seems to be the logical answer to decreasing serum antioxidant concentrations, but antioxidants may have adverse effects. The benefit of supplementing antioxidants in critically ill populations has not been shown and requires further study.
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PMID:Oxidative stress in critical care: is antioxidant supplementation beneficial? 973

The caval syndrome is a serious complication of chronic heartworm (Dirofilaria immitis) disease in dogs and cats. The syndrome is characterized by acute anorexia, respiratory distress, weakness, right-sided cardiac murmur, anemia, hemoglobinuria, hepatic and renal dysfunction, signs of forward and backward heart failure, and, possibly, disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC). Retrograde migration of adult heartworms from the pulmonary arteries to the right ventricle, right atrium, and venae cavae causes disruption of the tricuspid apparatus. Valvular insufficiency, with concurrent pulmonary hypertension, reduces cardiac output thus resulting in forward and backward heart failure. Additionally, red blood cells are traumatized and hemolyzed as they flow through the mass of worms. Therapy consists of supportive care and the removal of the heartworm mass from the right ventricular inflow tract. Caval syndrome in dogs and cats is associated with high mortality rates and generally has a guarded to poor prognosis.
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PMID:Canine and feline caval syndrome. 975 97

Incidence of falciparum malaria in developed countries has increased in recent years due to tourism to tropical countries and immigration from Asia and Africa. In Switzerland, about 250 cases of malaria were reported in 1994 to the Federal Office of Health, including three cases with fatal outcome.1 The most commonly described complications of plasmodia infection are cerebral malaria, acute renal failure, and severe anemia with disseminated intravascular coagulation. However, pulmonary involvement occurs in 3 to 10% of cases and represents the most serious complication of this infection, with a lethality of 70%.2,3 Furthermore, a pronounced general immunosuppression has been reported in malaria patients, which may predispose them to opportunistic infections.4 We report a case of Plasmodium falciparum infection complicated by severe acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) with development of systemic cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection leading to death. This evolution implies a severe immune deficiency associated with malaria, as previously suggested in the literature.
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PMID:Septic Shock due to Cytomegalovirus Infection in Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome after Falciparum Malaria. 981 2

We describe five patients with complications following amphetamine overdose. Two of the patients died: one with disseminated intravascular coagulation and circulatory collapse, one with severe rhabdomyolysis and ischemic colitis. Among the other three cases, one developed acute psychosis, hyperthermia and rhabdomyolysis, one developed acute respiratory distress syndrome and one pericarditis. The effects of amphetamine are discussed along with the diagnosis and treatment of patients with such poisoning.
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PMID:[Amphetamine poisoning]. 988 3

A 60 year-old female who had never been seriously ill, was brought to the emergency ward after she had been found somnolent at home. She developed renal failure, meningitis, respiratory distress and disseminated intravascular coagulation. Overwhelming septicemia was evident, and streptococcus pneumoniae was isolated from blood and cerebrospinal fluid. Surprisingly, peripheral blood smears showed numerous Howell-Jolly-bodies, indicating severe impairment of splenic function. On abdominal ultrasound, CT-scan, and scintigraphy no spleen could be detected. There was no history of abdominal surgery. Apparently, congenital asplenia, which was not noticed until the age of 60, was responsible for the patient's life-threatening septicemia. We suggest that, in cases of severe septicemia, the examination of a blood smear is useful to detect functional (or congenital) asplenia.
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PMID:Congenital asplenia detected in a 60 year old patient with septicemia. 1042 66

Hyperleukocytic leukemias are a small proportion of leukemias that have white blood cell count > 100 x 10(9)/l, most of them are leukemic blast cells. These leukemias have a grave prognosis because they can develop a leukostasis syndrome which describes: the acute onset of pulmonary failure and, often, neurologic deficits and disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC). The leukostasis is produced by the mechanical obstruction of vascular bed by blast cells, which can be induced by the spontaneous tumor lysis or as a side effect of cytotoxic drugs. So, hyperleukocytic leukemias require early and vigorous measures to decrease the white blood cell count, using leukapheresis and/or chemotherapy, before pulmonary failure exists. Then, it is possible to reverse the lesions. We report two cases of acute myeloblastic leukemia with a white blood count > 100 x 10(9)/l, that developed a respiratory distress syndrome and died. The postmortem examination has been done in one of the cases.
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PMID:[Respiratory distress syndrome due to hyperleukocytic leukemias]. 1048 37

We describe the case of a patient with a neonatal giant cutaneous hemangioma with high-output cardiac failure and Kasabach-Merritt syndrome and successfully treated with transcutaneous arterial embolization aimed at controlling severe congestive heart failure and consumption coagulopathy. A patient was admitted to the neonatal care unit on the first day of age because of a large hemangioma on his right lateral chest wall and respiratory distress, associated with cardiac failure resulting from arteriovenous shunting. On the second day of age the platelet count decreased to 5.7 x 10(4)/microliter and fibrinogen level was 85 mg/dl. The values of prothrombin time and activated partial thromboplastin time were prolonged. Intravenous predonisone therapy was started immediately, but bleeding tendency was getting worse and the evidence of congestive heart failure persisted. On the third day the patient then underwent embolization of feeding arteries with microcoils. The cardiac failure and thrombocytopenic coagulopathy had improved significantly without complications. We conclude that transcutaneous arterial embolization is an effective and safe treatment in this neonate and should be considered for the treatment of control high-output cardiac failure and coagulopathy in infants with hemangioma and Kasabach-Merritt syndrome.
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PMID:Successful transcutaneous arterial embolization of a giant hemangioma associated with high-output cardiac failure and Kasabach-Merritt syndrome in a neonate: a case report. 1064 62


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