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)

With improving standards of antenatal care, severe pre-eclampsia dn eclampsia are becoming less common and experience in the management of these conditions is lessening. Co-ordinated plans for the care of patients should be established by obstetricians and anaesthetists working as a team. A suitable regime for drug therapy in severe pre-eclampsia or eclampsia is the following: Initial management Diazepam 10 mg slowly i.v. Pethidine 100-150 mg i.m. or i.v. in incremental dosage, or extradural blocks, if analgesia is also required. Hydrallazine 20 mg i.v. initially, followed by 5 mg at intervals of 20 min until the diastolic pressure is less than 110 mm Hg. Then, preferably by syringe pump in a concentration of 2 mg/ml, at a rate of 2-20 mg/h. If vomiting occurs this can be controlled by administration of atropine. Subsequent management Sedation and anticonvulsant therapy. Continue diazepam and, in severe cases, institute chlormethiazole infusion. Continue analgesia with pethidine or extradural block. Control of hypertension by adjusting the dose of hydrallazine. If tachycardia exceeds 120 beat/min give propanolol 2-4 mg i.v. Plasma protein depletion with groww oedema is treated by administration of salt-free albumin or plasma protein fraction. Diuretic therapy is indicated if there is gross oedema or signs suggestive of acute renal failure. Oliguria associated with increased blood urea may be a result of renal failure or dehydration. The latter should be evident from the patient's condition and central venous pressure, but i.v. fluids and frusemide 20-40 mg can be used as a therapeutic test. Mannitol reduces cerebral oedema and may be given if diuresis has been first produced with frusemide. Potassium chloride is given if the plasma potassium decreases to less than 3 mmol/litre. Heparin therapy is considered if there is clinical evidence of disseminated intravascular coagulation.
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PMID:The management of severe pre-eclampsia and eclampsia. 83 44

Intensive care unit patients are a group with an increased risk for the development of septicemia. The combination of illness (trauma, burn, surgery, metabolic coma etc.) and iatrogenic factors (foreign bodies, ventilation, drugs etc.) make them more susceptible to severe infections. Rapid diagnosis of septicemia is important, since the prognosis is dependent on rapid treatment. Sedation and ventilation may mask the primary symptoms of septicemia, and in these cases the condition is not diagnosed until signs of complications (shock, disseminated intravascular coagulation, multiple organ failure) appear. Aside from clinical observation and laboratory results, hemodynamic symptoms may be indicative of septicemia. In the presence of septic signs, blood, tracheal secretion, urine etc. must be cultivated without delay, before starting empirical treatment. Surveillance cultures may make for more appropriate initial treatment, though they pose the problem of differentiation between colonization and infection.
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PMID:[Infection in intensive care medicine: predisposition, pathogenesis and diagnosis]. 638 99