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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 radioimmunoassay for fibrinopeptide A (FPA) has been developed. This assay uses rabbit antibodies induced by injection of native FPA-human serum albumin conjugates and 125I introduced into tyrosine-FPA synthesized in out laboratory. Plasma FPA is separated from fibrinogen by TCA extraction. The assay is capable of detecting as little as 50 pg/ml of FPA. In 20 normal donors this assay revealed a mean concentration of 0.9 ng/ml (0.3 SD). In five patients with
disseminated intravascular coagulation
, FPA concentrations ranged from 13.0 to 346 ng/ml. Two groups of patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) whose disease had achieved complete remission were studied; one consisted of four patients with no history of lupus nephritis and another with a history of nephritis. Mean FPA concentrations of 1.5 ng/ml (range, 0.7-1.8 ng/ml) and 2.7 ng/ml (range, 1.1-5.6 ng/ml) were found in these two groups, respectively. Another group of nine patients with active SLE, but without evidence of lupus nephritis, had a mean FPA concentration of 4.5 ng/ml (range, 2.4-7.8 ng/ml). Finally, a group of seven patients with active SLE, including active nephritis, had a mean FPA concentration of 10.2 ng/ml (range, 5.3-17.0 ng/ml). A positive correlation was found between the concentration of plasma FPA and serum DNA-binding activity and an inverse correlation was found between plasma FPA and the concentration of serum C3. No correlation existed between plasma FPA and concentration of serum creatinine. Several possibilities for the origin of plasma FPA in patients with SLE were considered; at present it seems most likely that FPA arises through the action of
thrombin
on fibrinogen.
...
PMID:Fibrinopeptide A in plasma of normal subjects and patients with disseminated intravascular coagulation and systemic lupus erythematosus. 93 2
An investigation of 78 cases of adrenal haemorrhage and necrosis disclosed that 32 were examples of adrenal venous infarction. In all these cases there was thrombosis of the main adrenal vein and in most there was also thrombosis of the capsular veins, a finding which has not been well established. In a number of cases with venous infarction there was clinical and pathological evidence that
disseminated intravascular coagulation
(
DIC
) had occurred, but it appears that it was not the direct cause of venous thrombosis. The majority of cases of venous infarction occur in patients with severe infection, frequently of the respiratory tract. Venous infarction was found in five cases with hypothermia an association which had rarely been described, and in three of these there was evidence of
DIC
. This is apparently the first occasion on which
DIC
has been demonstrated in cases of hypothermia in man. The cause of venous thrombosis in the adrenal glands is obscure in most cases of venous infarction, although in three it was due to involvement by metastatic carcinoma. It is suggested that the factors responsible for the initiation of thrombosis in the adrenal veins are catecholamines,
thrombin
, fibrin and endotoxin. Localisation of the thrombi to the adrenal vein is due to the unique anatomical structure of the vein which, under certain circumstances, results in the local stasis of blood.
...
PMID:Venous infarction of the adrenal glands. 93 79
Blood coagulation tests were performed in 93 newborn infants with different Apgar score at the 1st and 5th minutes of life. The laboratorial determinations were periodically performed at 0, 24 and 48 hours of life. The following tests were performed: bleeding time, whole blood clotting time, prothrombin time, kaolin-cephalin clotting time,
thrombin
time, dosage of factors I, V, VIII and X, clot retraction, platelet count, englobulin lysis time and the tourniquet test. Immediately after birth, the mean values of the blood coagulation factors were significantly different among the groups, with the exception of the whole blood clotting time and the platelet count. Those differences were due to the presence of the more depressed neonates. Although these results could indicate some degree of hepatic damage, it was apparent that an activation of the blood coagulation mechanisms took place, leading to a
consumption coagulopathy
. The infants who died (10) presented clinical and laboratorial data suggestive of
disseminated intravascular coagulation
(
DIC
). Necroscopic findings of microthrombosis in the liver and in the central nervous system were diagnosed in two infants.
...
PMID:Apgar score and blood coagulation factors. 93 62
The infusion of
thrombin
in rats induced a
disseminated intravascular coagulation
(
DIC
) with haemolysis and schistocytosis. The number of schistocytes was found to be correlated to fibrinogen catabolism, plasma haemoglobin level and to the extent of fibrin deposition in the renal glomeruli in the early phase only. Later, no correlation could be observed, indicating a time-dependent behaviour of schistocytosis. The results suggest that a large number of schistocytes in blood smear is suspicious for
DIC
. These studies also support the concept that fibrin depositions in the blood vessels could play a role in the production of red cell fragmentation by mechanical destruction.
...
PMID:The appearance of schistocytes in the peripheral blood in correlation to the degree of disseminated intravascular coagulation. An experimental study in rats. 95 Jan 76
The high incidence of
consumption coagulopathy
in active liver cirrhosis prompted us to introduce low-dosage heparin therapy (LDHT) in the management of this condition. An investigation was carried out on 109 patients with clinical and biochemical evidence of progressive liver cirrhosis, which was designed to evaluate whether in addition to basic LDHT, the administration of either vitamin K1, human fibrinogen or partial prothrombin complex (Prothromplex 500) enhanced the results obtained with LDHT alone. The normotest, PTT,
thrombin
coagulase activity, fibrinogen and platelet count were determined at regular intervals. A significant increase in fibrinogen and platelet count was obtained within 14 days of LDHT in about 75% of the patients and the
consumption coagulopathy
was halted. Additional treatment with vitamin K1 did not bring about any further increase in the prothrombin complex. Substitution therapy with factors II, IX, X and fibrinogen combined with LDHT brought the expected results. The results reported in the literature and the aims of, and indications for LDHT are discussed.
...
PMID:[The therapeutic management of consumption coagulopathy in progressive liver cirrhosis: low-dosage heparin therapy (author's transl)]. 99 29
Disseminated intravascular coagulation
was induced in rats by injection of a silver colloid suspension or
thrombin
. Ten min after the injection of colloid, fibrin deposits were observed light microscopically in all major organs. At 30 min, fibrin was no longer present. In rats treated with antifibrinolytics (epsilon-aminocaproic acid or Trasylol) fibrin was still present at 30 and 60 min. Interaction of fibrin with Kupffer cells was studied by electron microscopy. At 3, 10, and 20 min after the colloid injection, all fibrin occurred extracellularly, close to the surface of Kupffer cells. At 30 min, all fibrin had disappeared. In rats pretreated with antifibrinolytics, too, all fibrin was found extracellularly at 10, 30, and 60 min. Comparable results were obtained when
thrombin
was used to induce coagulation. It is concluded that removal of native fibrin from the circulation by Kupffer-cell phagocytosis is unlikely.
...
PMID:Rat liver macrophages will not phagocytose fibrin during disseminated intravascular coagulation. 100 4
The coagulation and fibrinolytic systems play a key role in maintaining the integrity and patency of the vascular compartment. Pregnancy induces extensive physiological changes in these systems, thus creating an enhanced capacity to produce fibrin and a diminished ability to remove it. Fibrin deposition localized to the uteroplacental circulation is a feature of normal pregnancy. In women with fatal eclampsia,
disseminated intravascular coagulation
with fibrin deposition in the renal glomeruli is well documented. The condition of preeclampsia is not well defined. Nonetheless, evidence of intravascular coagulation, as shown by elevated levels of fibrin degradation products and reduced platelet counts, has been found in many women with preeclampsia. Serial studies showed that
thrombin
generation, as indicated by the ratio of factor VIII-related antigen to factor VIII coagulant activity, is considerably in excess of that which occurs in normal pregnancy, and its appearance coincides with the development of the clinical features of preeclampsia. Heparin therapy has bot been proven of value in established preeclampsia, but this fact does not disprove that role that intravascular coagulation may play in the pathogenesis of the disease. A controlled trial ina high-risk group of low-dose he;arin and an antiplatelet agent from the 16th to the 18th weeks of pregnancy onwards is required to elucidate the role of intravascular coagulation in preeclapmsia and its effect on the fetus.
...
PMID:The role of coagulation and fibrinolysis in preeclampsia. 100 56
Alternations in the coagulation mechanism were looked for in a population of eclamptic women, most of when were young, nulliparous, and without evidence of chronic vascular disease, and all of whom survived. Thrombocytopenia was identified in 29% of these women. A prolonged plasma
thrombin
time was demonstrated in 51% yet elevated fibrinogen-fibrin degradation products in serum were uncommon, as was fibrin monomer in plasma. Overt microangiopathic hemolysis was rare. It is concluded that
disseminated intravascular coagulation
, when it does occur in eclampsia, is the consequence of the disease rather than the cause. Moreover, endothelial damage, rather contents, probably initiates the thrombocytopenia and other coagulation changes.
...
PMID:Does coagulation have a causative role in eclampsia? 100 57
A study of coagulation disorders due to hepatitis A infection occurring during pregnancy was undertaken to determine if the unique coagulation status produced by pregnancy (elevated clotting factors and decreased fibrinolytic activity) was responsible for the increased severity of hepatitis A infections reported for pregnant women from various parts of the world. Of 49 patients studied, 12 (24%) developed hepatic failure and 9 (18%) died. A prolonged prothrombin time and low fibrinogen level were found to be as frequent as previously reported for nonpregnant patients with and without hepatic failure. Thrombocytopenia was less common and a long
thrombin
time was more common. Although intravascular coagulation was suggested by a lower mean fibrinogen level than expected in late pregnancy, mean platelet counts were similar to controls. The frequency of a positive protamine sulfate paracoagulation test for intravascular coagulation (
DIC
) was similar to that reported for uncomplicated pregnancy, and was of no prognostic value when performed on admission. We conclude that the severe clinical course of hepatitis during pregnancy in this epidemic was not attributable to a predisposition for
DIC
. However, once fulminant hepatitis occurred,
DIC
may have been a clinically significant factor.
...
PMID:Coagulation studies of viral hepatitis occurring during pregnancy. 100 76
Intravascular coagulation was induced by two appropriately spaced doses of endotoxin and by infusion of thromboplastin. The resulting fibrin deposition was measured by a previously described quantitative technique. Evidence of
thrombin
elaboration was obtained indirectly by measurement of fibrin monomer (FM) and by the detection and isolation of a
thrombin
-induced anticlotting activity. Venous segments were isolated at intervals and examined for thrombus formation following 40 minutes of stasis. Endotoxin triggered
thrombin
elaboration was not detectable in the circulation for at least one hour and was not accompanied by any thrombosis in isolated venous segments. No
thrombin
elaboration was found in leukopenic rabbits given endotoxin. In the thromboplastin infused animals, the quantity of fibrin deposited in the organs was comparable to that found after endotoxin. However,
thrombin
was found in the blood immediately and was associated with thrombosis in the isolatet venous segments. Less
thrombin
-induced anticoagulant activity was found after thromboplastin than after endotoxin. The findings suggest that endotoxin-induced intravascular coagulation is probably not caused by a mechanism of systemic hypercoagulability due to the release of thromboplastic material into the blood stream. A focal process of
thrombin
elaboration involving leukocytes is postulated. The study is believed relevant to patients with
disseminated intravascular coagulation
in whom venous thromboembolism is rarely found despite evidence of extensive microvascular fibrin deposition.
...
PMID:Thrombin elaboration in endotoxin-induced intravascular fibrin deposition. A leukocyte dependent process distinct from systemic hypercoagulability. 103 55
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