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Query: UMLS:C0012739 (
disseminated intravascular coagulation
)
8,673
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A technique has been developed to identify and quantitate unique plasmic degradation products of crosslinked fibrin in plasma. In this method, fibrin derivatives are extracted by heat precipitation and dissolved with disulfide bond reduction, after which the crosslinked gamma-gamma chain remnants are identified by SDS-polyacrylamide gradient gel electrophoresis and quantitated by densitometric analysis. A heterogenous group of gamma-gamma chains with molecular weights between 100,000 and 76,000 daltons was identified in lysates of crosslinked fibrin during plasmic degradation in vitro. Three stages of crosslinked fibrin degradation have been arbitrarily defined based primarily on the extent of degradation of these gamma-
gamma polypeptide
chains. As little as 20 microgram of crosslinked fibrin digests added to 1 ml of normal plasma could be detected by the heat-extraction--gel-electrophoresis technique, identifying the gamma-gamma derivatives with molecular weights of 96,000, 86,000, 82,000, and 76,000 daltons. Plasmic derivatives of gamma-gamma chains were not found in normal plasma, but they were identified in the plasma of patients with
disseminated intravascular coagulation
and deep-vein thrombosis, both before and in increased quantity during successful thrombolytic therapy.
...
PMID:Detection of circulating crosslinked fibrin derivatives by a heat extraction-SDS gradient gel electrophoretic technique. 50 38
Coagulation profiles were performed in 30 consecutive alcoholic cirrhotic patients without known infection, malignancy, recent surgery, transfusion, or alcoholic intake. Hemorrhagic phenomena were present in 70% and included gastrointestinal bleeding, oozing from venipuncture sites, bruising, and epistaxis. All 30 patients had multiple liver function and coagulation abnormalities, the most frequent of which were increases in F VIII components and decreases in F XI and F VII. Also decreased in half or more of the 30 patients were Fletcher F, F II, F X, prothrombin time (PT), partial thromboplastin time (APTT), thrombin time (TT), reptilase time (RT), anti-thrombin III, and plasminogen. When comparing cirrhotic bleeders with nonbleeders, four parameters were significantly different in those with a bleeding tendency: F VII, anti-thrombin III, plasminogen, and albumin. The prolonged APTT was associated in four cases with a blocking inhibitor of unknown etiology. The prolonged TT and RT, in the absence of fibrin split products, fibrin monomers,
DIC
, or shortened euglobulin lysis time in any patient were suggestive of an abnormal fibrinogen, a dysfibrinogen. In three other patients, there was an inhibitor of the TT. Further investigation of the suspected dysfibrinogen in 21 patients by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis revealed that the molecular weights of the Aalpha, Bbeta, and
gamma polypeptide
chains of fibrinogen were not different from normal. Two-dimensional immunoelectrophoresis of the suspected dysfibrinogen was similar to normal in 18 of 21 patients, with loss of the initial shoulder in three.
...
PMID:Bleeding and coagulation abnormalities in alcoholic cirrhotic liver disease. 704 81