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)

A case of sickle cell disease diagnosed postmortem is described. A 37-year-old black woman presented with anemia, respiratory distress, and abdominal and back pain. Death followed an intramuscular injection of iron, and anaphylaxis was clinically diagnosed. At autopsy, massive fat and necrotic bone marrow embolization of pulmonary and renal vessels was found. In the vertebral column, multifocal areas of ischemic necrosis were present, and proved to be the source of this embolization. Sickled red cells appeared in bone marrow sinusoids, and signs of disseminated intravascular coagulation were present.
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PMID:Massive fat and necrotic bone marrow embolization in a previously undiagnosed patient with sickle cell disease. 230 55

Experience gained with the use of plasmapheresis in 336 children with different diseases is described. In patients with bacterial and inflammatory processes, the effect was attained after the first plasmapheresis session. Acuity of the immunomediated processes decreased after exfusion of 2-3.5 volumes of the circulating plasma. The replacement of the exfused plasma by protein blood preparations was made only in patients with hepatodystrophy, bacterial and inflammatory diseases, and immune complex diseases combined with the signs of consumption coagulopathy. After a course of plasmapheresis there was a significant lowering of total protein, albumin and immunoglobulin G. The reduction of the content of hemoglobin and red blood cells was related to hemodilution Iron homeostasis remained unchanged. The use of plasmapheresis in atopic dermatitis without preventive administration of an antibiotic is associated with the risk of the development of post-catheterization thrombophlebitis.
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PMID:[Intensive plasmapheresis (programs, laboratory monitoring, complications)]. 258 44

Accidental iron intoxication is one of the most serious and potentially fatal intoxications in young children. Occurrence in the adult population is rare and is usually associated with a suicide or homicide attempt. Heretofore, all reported cases have involved oral ingestion of ferrous and ferric salts of iron. In a case of fatal iron intoxication reported by Doolin and Drueck, in addition to swallowing a liquid form of ferrous chloride, the patient aspirated it and absorbed it through chemically burned and denuded areas of skin when he fell into a vat of saturated ferrous chloride at work. It is the purpose of this report to describe the first case of fatal iron intoxication in which the sole route of iron absorption was the burned skin. Clinical course of this patient paralleled that of acute oral iron intoxication with development of refractory acidosis, disseminated intravascular coagulation, respiratory and renal failure, and sepsis.
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PMID:Fatal transcutaneous iron intoxication. 322 Aug 52

Calves inoculated with Sarcocystis cruzi sporocysts developed severe anemia 4 weeks later. The anemic crisis was paralleled by a hyperbilirubinemia, with up to 88% of the increased total bilirubin attributed to indirect reacting bilirubin. The anemia was characterized as normocytic and normochromic. In a few instances, according to Coombs's tests (antiglobulin test) and erythrocyte eluates from infected calves, immunoglobulin G was associated with the RBC membrane. In the histopathologic examinations of tissues from calves dying during the anemic crisis, there was deposition of iron in the splenic red pulp. The hematologic studies supported the claim that the anemia in acute bovine sarcocystosis is an extravascular hemolytic event, probably with an immunologic basis. In the coagulation studies, consumption coagulopathy consistent with disseminated intravascular coagulation was seen to occur during acute sarcocystosis. At 4 weeks after inoculations were done, there were prolongations of activated partial thromboplastin and 1-stage prothrombin times and decreased functional fibrinogen concentration, and thrombocytopenia, although increase of fibrinogen-fibrin degradation products were not demonstrable. These findings indicate that endothelial parasitism by schizonts of S cruzi may cause endothelial damage, resulting in coagulation abnormalities that include disseminated intravascular coagulation.
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PMID:Hematologic and coagulation abnormalities in acute bovine sarcocystosis. 642 7

A 17-year-old girl swallowed at least 50 Duroferon duretter. Each tablet contains ferrous sulphate equivalent to 0.1 g Fe2+. Thus, a total of 5 g Fe2+ was ingested. Vitamin K-dependent coagulation factors dropped within the next hours to very low levels. Thrombotest showed less than 3% of normal coagulation activity 8 h after oral intake. Recovery was uneventful except for laboratory evidence of transient liver damage. The rapidity by which the early coagulation deficiencies developed and the lack of evidence of disseminated intravascular coagulation suggested a direct effect of iron on coagulation factors. In vitro studies confirmed that iron in concentrations that may have been attained in vivo, altered the functional activity of several coagulation factors. Monitoring the vitamin K-dependent coagulation factors may be a simple and useful parameter in acute iron intoxication.
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PMID:Acute iron intoxication with abruptly reduced levels of vitamin K-dependent coagulation factors. 712 52

Treatment for the paraneoplastic syndrome associated with lung cancer was reviewed. The principle of the treatment of paraneoplastic syndrome is to control cancer as an underlying disease. Therefore, the standard therapy for Cushing's syndrome associated with lung cancer is surgical treatment if the tumor is operable. There is no standard therapy for Cushing's syndrome associated with advanced small-cell lung cancer. Metyrapone is used in combination with systemic chemotherapy. The effects of ketoconazole and octreotide are under investigation. To control hyponatremia due to the syndrome of inappropriate antidiuretic hormone secretion, fluid restriction is standard. When hyponatremia cannot be controlled with fluid restriction, demeclocycline can be used. For life-threatening hyponatremia, hypertonic saline with intravenous furosemide is administered under careful monitoring. Followed by hydration with saline, pamidronate is effective for the control of symptomatic hypercalcemia. Combined use of calcitonin facilitates rapid normalization of serum calcium for critically ill cases. Heparin is used for patients with recurrent episodes of thrombosis resulting from chronic disseminated intravascular coagulation, although the efficacy is controversial. Thrombocytes and coagulation factors are combined with heparin for patients with uncontrollable bleeding, although the efficacy is not established.
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PMID:[Paraneoplastic syndrome]. 936 21

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

121 malaria cases treated in the Ward of Tropical Diseases of the Clinic of the Institute of Maritime and Tropical Medicine in Gdynia in the years 1993-1999 were analysed. About 37% of the patients showed symptoms of parenchymal liver injury manifested by increased bilirubin concentration, elevated transaminase, alkaline phosphatase and GGTP levels. Histopathological examination of the liver revealed the activation of cells of mononuclear phagocyte system, Kupffer's cells in particular, with the presence of granules of browny-black ,,malarial" pigment and iron deposits. In one fatal tropical malaria case, symptoms of disseminated intravascular coagulation were found along with a few lymphocytic infiltrations in portal spaces, and focal necrosis of hepatocytes. In some patients with the so-called ,,untypical" secondary liver lesions present in the histopathological examination, the toxic effect of antimalarial drugs should be taken into account. A liver biopsy is justified in patients manifesting multiple courses of malaria. It is indispensable in cases of suspected polyetiological changes in the liver and in cases of recompensation payment claims.
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PMID:Liver injury in the course of malaria. 1121 8

This article describes the first autopsy case of heme oxygenase (HO)-1 deficiency. A 6-year-old boy who presented with growth retardation; anemia; leukocytosis; thrombocytosis; coagulation abnormality; elevated levels of haptoglobin, ferritin, and heme in serum; a low serum bilirubin concentration; and hyperlipidemia was diagnosed as HO-1 deficient by gene analysis several months before death. Autopsy showed amyloid deposits in the liver and adrenal glands and mesangioproliferative glomerular changes in kidneys, in addition to an irregular distribution of foamy macrophages with iron pigments. Fatty streaks and fibrous plaques were noted in the aorta. Compared with HO-1--targeted mice, the present case seems to more severely involve endothelial cells and the reticuloendothelial system, resulting in intravascular hemolysis, disseminated intravascular coagulation, and amyloidosis with a short survival. This contrasts to the predominant iron metabolic disorders of HO-1--targeted mice with a long survival.
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PMID:Heme oxygenase-1 deficiency: the first autopsy case. 1182 83

We used geochemical analyses of groundwater and laboratory-incubated microcosms to investigate the physiological responses of naturally occurring microorganisms to coal-tar-waste constituents in a contaminated aquifer. Waters were sampled from wells along a natural hydrologic gradient extending from uncontaminated (1 well) into contaminated (3 wells) zones. Groundwater analyses determined the concentrations of carbon and energy sources (pollutants or total organic carbon), final electron acceptors (oxygen, nitrate, sulfate), and metabolic byproducts (dissolved inorganic carbon [DIC], alkalinity, methane, ferrous iron, sulfide, Mn2+). In the contaminated zone of the study site, concentrations of methane, hydrogen, alkalinity, and DIC were enhanced, while dissolved oxygen and nitrate were depleted. Field-initiated biodegradation assays using headspace-free serum bottle microcosms filled with groundwater examined metabolism of the ambient organic contaminants (naphthalene, 2-methylnaphthalene, benzothiophene, and indene) by the native microbial communities. Unamended microcosms from the contaminated zone demonstrated the simultaneous degradation of several coal-tar-waste constituents at the in situ temperature (10 degrees C). Lag phases prior to the onset of biodegradation indicated the prevalence of both aerobic and anaerobic conditions in situ. Electron acceptor-amended microcosms from the most contaminated well waters demonstrated only aerobic naphthalene degradation. Collectively, the geochemical and microbial evidence show that biodegradation of coal-tar-waste constituents occurs via both aerobic and anaerobic terminal electron accepting processes at this site.
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PMID:Geochemical and physiological evidence for mixed aerobic and anaerobic field biodegradation of coal tar waste by subsurface microbial communities. 1208 24


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