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)

Patients who are severely envenomed by Russell's viper develop DIC which is frequently associated with spontaneous bleeding and incoagulable blood. These haemostatic disturbances may be responsible for death or organ/tissue damage both through haemorrhage and microvascular occlusion by fibrin thrombi. The most striking laboratory features of the coagulopathy developing after Russell's viper bite in the 42 patients studied were depletion of fibrinogen (mean 0.09 g/l, range 0-0.6), factor V (6.5 u/dl, range 0-17), factor X (35 u/dl, range 1-85), factor XIIIa (57 u/dl, range 15-82), plasminogen (61 u/dl, range 10-92), antiplasmin (36 u/dl, range 14-62). Protein C (49 u/dl, range 15-100) and platelets (104 x 10(9)/l, range 25-197). Intense fibrinolytic activity was detected in all cases with marked elevation of FDPs (1614 micrograms/ml, range 350-3000), a large proportion of which were cross-linked (1058 micrograms/ml, range 38-3000). The monospecific Burmese antivenom appeared to be very effective in neutralizing the venom procoagulants and in restoring blood coagulability. Moreover, the unexpectedly normal level of AT III provides a theoretical basis for the use of heparin to enhance the inactivation of those serine proteases present before antivenom administration.
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PMID:Haemostatic disturbances in patients bitten by Russell's viper (Vipera russelli siamensis) in Burma. 340 87

Twenty-seven attacks of acute human pancreatitis of different severity were analysed concerning clinical outcome and activation of the coagulation and fibrinolytic systems. Consumptive coagulopathy was suggested by decreased platelet counts, decreased prothrombin values and consumption of fibrinogen during the first days in severe attacks. Factor X was slightly decreased the first 5 days in all attacks. Increased fibrinolysis was suggested by decreased plasminogen values in severe attacks. Fibrinogen degradation products were seen in 40% of the patients in blood and in 100% of the patients in the peritoneal fluid. The four main protease inhibitors of the two systems all showed protease-antiprotease complexation and lower functional than quantitative values. Plasma levels of antithrombin III and alpha 2-macroglobulin were low, while the levels of C1-inhibitor and alpha 2-antiplasmin were high. Functional levels of all the four protease inhibitors were almost zero in the peritoneal fluid in severe attacks. It is concluded that severe acute pancreatitis results in both consumptive coagulopathy and in increased fibrinolysis. A local antiprotease deficiency is seen in the peritoneal cavity and high levels of protease-antiprotease complexes are also seen in plasma. All these changes are closely correlated to the severity of the disease and may probably determine the clinical outcome of the acute attack.
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PMID:Consumptive coagulopathy, fibrinolysis and protease-antiprotease interactions during acute human pancreatitis. 351 16

Coagulation parameters were initially monitored in 8 patients receiving whole body hyperthermia (WBH). Patients were heated by the warm water blanket technique to 41.8 degrees C (Tmax), maintained at this temperature for 2 hours, then allowed to cool. A fall in platelets was apparent by the time Tmax was achieved and continued during the 18 hours after WBH. Levels of beta-thromboglobulin (BTG) and platelet factor 4 rose by 56% and 191% by the end of treatment but returned to baseline 18 hours later. Fibrinogen, plasminogen and alpha 2-antiplasmin levels declined and FDP and fibrinopeptide A (FPA) levels increased during WBH. Factor XII and Factor VIII:C fell moderately during WBH while Factors VIII R:Ag, VIII:RC and V did not change or showed a late rise. Factor VII levels fell in 7 of 8 patients, reaching levels of 30% of normal in four. To better define the sequence of these coagulations perturbations, earlier and more frequent timepoints were studied in an additional 3 patients. This revealed that decreases in fibrinogen and plasminogen and increases in FPA and BTG occur very early (by the time the patient reaches 39 degrees C). On the other hand, a decrease in Factor VII activity was not apparent until patients had reached Tmax. WBH is therefore associated with a consumption coagulopathy. Possible mechanisms are discussed and extrapolations to the situation seen in heat stroke are suggested.
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PMID:Activation of coagulation during therapeutic whole body hyperthermia. 373 68

Six coagulation proteins were measured in 79 consecutive patients referred to the coagulation service for suspected disseminated intravascular coagulation. Antithrombin III, plasminogen, and alpha 2-plasmin inhibitor were measured with fluorescent substrate assays. Fibronectin, prothrombin, and protein C were measured with electroimmunoassays. Using history and physical findings and the results of a coagulation screen (prothrombin time, partial thromboplastin time, fibrinogen, fibrin[ogen] degradation products, platelet count, and peripheral smear), the 79 patients were classified into five categories: no disseminated intravascular coagulation (n = 21), elevated fibrin(ogen) degradation products without other evidence of coagulopathy (n = 44), defibrination syndrome (n = 9), microangiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura (n = 4), and primary fibrinolysis (n = 1). Because the sensitivity and specificity of each of the proteins could not easily be compared, receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves and areas under the ROC curves were calculated for each of the six proteins as well as for the tests of the coagulation screen. The ROC curves indicated that, apart from plasminogen, the other coagulation proteins provided little additional information about the classification of the coagulopathy.
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PMID:Diagnostic efficacy of six plasma proteins in evaluating consumptive coagulopathies. Use of receiver operating characteristic curves to compare antithrombin III, plasminogen, alpha 2-plasmin inhibitor, fibronectin, prothrombin, and protein C. 376 44

The informative value of each of 15 laboratory indices (the amount of platelets, their factor 4 (PF-4), antithrombin III (AT III), fibrinogen and its degradation products (FDP), ethanol and protamine sulfate tests (ET, PST), plasminogen, the eucaryne test, etc.), most commonly used now in laboratory practice for the diagnosis of the DIC syndrome was assessed using mathematical methods relating mainly to the theory of pattern recognition. Basic and alternative algorithms of the recognition of the DIC syndrome which could be used with a minor error (less than or equal to 2.5% and less than or equal to 7-10% respectively) irrespective of the type, form and stage of this syndrome both in the automated system and in a common variant, were developed. Their testing was successfully implemented in a large group of patients with symptoms of the DIC syndrome (770 persons). Indices of the platelet amount, FDP, PF-4,ET and PST possessed the utmost informative value, and close functional ties were particularly noticeable between elevated FDP and lowered platelets. Optimum combinations of the diagnostic indices were presented and substantiated with relation to the potentialities of different types of laboratories.
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PMID:[Diagnostic criteria in the DIC syndrome and their validation using modern mathematical methods]. 378 83

Hypofibrinogenemia and disseminated intravascular coagulation are common events in patients with metastatic prostate carcinoma. This study tests the hypothesis that prostate tumor growth and metastasis is associated with sustained activation of fibrinolysis secondary to increased release of plasminogen activator. We implanted an androgen-insensitive prostate tumor into an inbred strain of rats and serially measured plasminogen, plasminogen activator, plasmin and fibrinogen. Control groups included animals without tumor and a group implanted with transitional cell bladder carcinoma, a locally infiltrating tumor not usually associated with hemostatic complications. Our results showed a significant and steady rise in plasma plasminogen activator, plasmin and fibrinogen levels in animals implanted with prostate cancer. This, however, is not specific for prostate tumor. Similar, perhaps more profound changes were noted in animals implanted with the transitional cell carcinoma.
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PMID:The fibrinolytic system in experimental prostate tumor. 381 May 52

Tests generally accepted in the diagnosis of DIC were evaluated in 13 patients with multiple trauma. The blood samples were drawn on admission before treatment with blood, blood products or heparin. The tests included platelet count, prothrombin complex (Normotest/Thrombotest), Factor V, Factor VIII:C, fibrinogen, fibrinogen degradation products (FDP), thrombin and Reptilase times as well as the ethanol gelation test (fibrin monomer). Based on the results of the tests, the patients were categorized into DIC, suspected DIC and no DIC groups. It was found that those patients who were referred to the DIC group were also those who later developed the most severe organ dysfunction and who stayed the longest time in the Intensive Care Unit. Thus, the clinical and laboratory findings agreed. The Normotest/Thrombotest ratio, thrombin times and Reptilase times, and presence of fibrin monomers were of limited value for the diagnosis of DIC. To make a correct diagnosis, the results of several of the conventional tests had to be combined. Additional tests were then evaluated. An increase of the fibrinopeptide A (FPA) level and the Factor VIIIR:Ag (vWF:Ag)/Factor VIII:C ratio in all the DIC patients as well as a decrease of the antithrombin (AT) level in some DIC patients indicated thrombin activity and a risk of thromboembolic events. A decrease of plasminogen and alpha 2-antiplasmin indicated activation of the fibrinolytic system. It is concluded that these new tests are useful in the diagnosis and treatment of DIC and similar proteolytic states.
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PMID:Blood coagulation and fibrinolytic factors as well as their inhibitors in trauma. 386 16

The behavior of direct fibrinolytic (non-plasmin) proteinase activity and plasminogen-activator activity in the lung and spleen was investigated in rats after a single intravenous injection of bacterial endotoxin, and the influence of thrombin inhibitors on the effects of the endotoxin was assessed. The non-plasmin fibrinolytic activity was markedly increased following a decrease of plasminogen-activator in the lung. In addition, variations in hematological parameters, i.e. a decrease of platelet count, fibrinogen level and antithrombin III, and an increase of blood urea nitrogen and euglobulin fibrinolytic activity, were induced by the injection, indicating the occurrence of disseminated intravascular coagulation. In comparative studies on the effects of the endotoxin injection and thrombin infusion, in the lung and spleen an increase of fibrinolytic proteinase activity was induced in a similar manner; the plasminogen-activator activity in the lung was decreased by the endotoxin injection but not decreased by the thrombin infusion. In prevention studies with heparin and MD-805, the latter was found to prevent the decrease of either fibrinogen or platelet count. However, the former failed to prevent the decrease of platelet count although that of the fibrinogen level was prevented. Heparin and MD-805 exerted no preventive effect on the endotoxin-induced variations of proteinase activity and plasminogen-activator activity in the lung.
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PMID:Variation in activities of non-plasmin fibrinolytic proteinase and plasminogen-activator in the lung and spleen induced by bacterial endotoxin in rats with special reference to the effects of MD-805. 390 90

Endotoxin producing bacteria cause disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC); however, the mechanism of endotoxin action in man is still unclear. Impairment of the fibrinolytic system has been suggested as a contributing mechanism. A single injection of Escherichia coli lipopolysaccharide in rabbits resulted in a marked and prolonged increase of the levels of a fast-acting inhibitor of plasminogen activator (PA-inhibitor) in plasma (from 3.9 +/- 0.7 to 41 +/- 13.2 U/ml after 3 h). Gel filtration studies indicated that inhibition of human tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA) by rabbit plasma is accompanied by a change in the elution profile of the activator compatible with the formation of an enzyme-inhibitor complex with an apparent molecular weight of 100,000. Injection of human t-PA (1,500 IU/kg body wt) in endotoxin treated animals resulted in very fast inhibition of t-PA and formation of a similar complex. The half-life of circulating PA-inhibitor activity in rabbits was about 7 min as estimated by donor receiver plasma transfusion experiments. Stimulation of cultured human endothelial cells with endotoxin resulted in enhanced rate of accumulation of PA-inhibitor activity in the culture medium (two- to sevenfold increase). In five patients with septicemia, markedly increased levels of PA-inhibitor (14.3 +/- 15.5 U/ml) as compared with control subjects (1.3 +/- 0.7 U/ml) were observed in plasma. A very strong correlation (r = 0.98) was found between inhibition of t-PA and of urokinase in all conditions, suggesting that this fast-acting inhibitor reacts with both plasminogen activators. These data suggest that the appearance of this fast-acting PA-inhibitor is very sensitive to endotoxin stimulation. The marked increase in the level of PA-inhibitor in blood may contribute to the pathogenesis of DIC in septicemia.
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PMID:Generation in plasma of a fast-acting inhibitor of plasminogen activator in response to endotoxin stimulation. 392 Feb 45

Plasma fibronectin (Fn), a glucoprotein of suggested importance in host defence during infections also seems to be involved in blood coagulation and to be consumed during clot formation. Low Fn concentrations have been found in patients with DIC, but also in patients with infections without signs of overt DIC. In a randomized trial of Fn supplementation 28 patients with moderately severe infections, hospitalized in the Department for Infectious Diseases, were scheduled to receive either cryoprecipitate from 30 donors (n = 14) or 250-300 ml of stored plasma (n = 14). To elucidate the relationship between Fn plasma levels, Fn-rich cryoprecipitate infusion, and possible low-grade DIC in these patients, we measured platelet count, prothrombin complex (NT), fibrinogen, F V, F VIIIR:Ag, F VIII:C, F XII, plasminogen (Plg), antiplasmin (AP), antithrombin III (AT), kallikrein-inhibiting activity (KI) and spontaneous proteolytic activity (SPA). Compared to healthy controls, high initial values (p less than .001) were found for fibrinogen, F VIIIR:Ag, F VIII:C and SPA. Most values for platelets, F V, Plg, AP and KI were within the reference range. Low levels (p less than .001) were found for Fn, NT, F XII, AT and for the ratio F VIII:C/F CIIIR:Ag. A significant correlation was found between F XII, Plg and AT. Fn correlated poorly to the other variables. Cryoprecipitate infusion normalized the Fn concentration, but had no influence on other measured variables. Thus, although no patient had clinically overt DIC, and all survived, we observed a distinct pattern indicating activation of the coagulation system. Fn levels were low, but were not specifically related to this activation.
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PMID:Fibronectin and other DIC-related variables in patients with moderately severe infections receiving cryoprecipitate. 393 19


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