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Query: UMLS:C0019087 (hemorrhagic diathesis)
678 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Vitamin K deficient hemorrhagic diathesis is well known as a cause of infantile intracranial hemorrhage. Its occurrence, however, as a post-surgical complication is rare and has never been reported previously. Two cases are presented here which illustrate the existence of such a hazard. Case 1. A 73-year-old woman admitted with subarachnoid hemorrhage (WFNS IV) underwent microsurgical exploration of a left internal carotid aneurysm, and neck clipping of the aneurysm was performed. She had an uneventful postoperative course, but her neurological condition deteriorated suddenly on the fifth postoperative day. CT scan revealed a large epidural hematoma. Case 2. A 6-year-old boy was admitted due to the dysfunction of a ventriculo-peritoneal shunt system that had previously been placed for hydrocephalus. This dysfunction was thought to be caused by meningitis. Twelve days after ventricular drainage and antibiotic therapy, sudden intraventricular hemorrhage occurred. In both cases, PT and APTT were markedly prolonged, FDP slightly increased and fibrinogen slightly decreased. SFMC was positive in case 2. After the administration of vitamin K, PT and APTT were immediately normalized. Recent reports emphasize the adverse effect of antibiotics that leads to vitamin K deficient hemorrhagic diathesis, especially, in patients in a cachectic state. In these two cases, such a cachectic condition was not observed. We presume that the cause of vitamin K deficiency would be, along with the administration of antibiotics, a preliminary condition of disseminated intravascular coagulation which is encountered in some neurological disorders including subarachnoid hemorrhage. We conclude that attention should be paid for these pitfalls in perioperative neurosurgical care.
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PMID:[Postoperative intracranial hemorrhage due to vitamin K deficiency: report of two cases]. 173 30

Assessment of animals with a suspected hemorrhagic diathesis of unknown cause(s) should be methodical. Most acquired coagulopathies result from thrombocytopenia. A platelet estimate (from a blood smear) and/or a platelet count on a fresh blood sample therefore are useful first steps in case evaluation. If thrombocytopenia is present, the most likely causes are immune-mediated destruction of platelets, DIC, or megakaryocytic hypoplasia. These diagnoses can be pursued by further test, including antiplatelet antibody assays (for example, the platelet factor 3 tests or an ELISA test), measurement of FDP, and bone marrow biopsy, respectively. If the platelet count is normal, a buccal mucosa bleeding time test is a useful second step. If this is prolonged, most likely causes are vWD or a thrombocytopathy (functional platelet defect). von Willebrand's disease can be diagnosed by measurement of vWf concentration or activity. A normal bleeding time does not exclude a diagnosis of vWD, but suggests that the functional activity of vWf is not compromised markedly. If the bleeding time is normal, APTT and PT should be measured. A prolonged APTT with normal PT, in the clinical setting, implies a deficiency of factor XI, IX, or VIII. A prolonged PT with normal APTT indicates factor VII deficiency. Prolongation of both APTT and PT usually is caused by a deficiency of several factors and is seen most often in cases with vitamin K deficiency or antagonism. Obviously, if a particular cause is suspected from the case history or for other reasons, appropriate tests should be evaluated at the beginning. If these do not confirm the provisional diagnosis, the just-described protocol might be a useful one to follow.
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PMID:Laboratory evaluation of hemorrhagic coagulopathies in small animal practice. 267 37

A female patient what M3 was seen to incur marked hemorrhagic diathesis during therapy. Heparin infusion was performed to inhibit disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC). However, oozing from the puncture site of the r-subclavian vein was observed. Her data on coagulation were as follows: AT-3 greater than 100%, fibrinogen 69.0 mg, XIII less than 40%, FPA 2.9 ng/ml and FDP-D dimer 256 ng/ml. The alpha-2-plasmin inhibitor (alpha 2-PI) was 44% and FDP 160 microgram/ml. These results suggested DIC with activated fibrinolysis. Thus, epsilon aminocaproic acid in conjunction with heparin, fibrinogen, and concentrated XIII was administered. The abnormal bleeding improved with an increase of alpha 2-PI and XIII. This clinical response indicated that an activated fibrinolysis and a decreased XIII might have been responsible for provoking the bleeding of the patient.
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PMID:[Antiplasmin drugs and factor XIII concentrates in the treatment of a patient with acute promyelocytic leukemia (M3)]. 281 Jul 83

Hemostasis was studied in 55 patients with myeloma, grouped in three groups according to the clinical stage of the disease. Thrombocytic adhesion, aggregation, activity of TF3 and TF4, of antithrombin III, FMDC level, FDP titre and fibrinolysis test were determined on the background of the screening coagulation tests. The studies were carried out before the treatment and were followed up after the therapeutic response or in the absence of improvement. Thirty per cent of the patients had manifestations of hemorrhagic diathesis, and 5 per cent - thromboembolism. Essential hemostatic deviations were found: progressive thrombocytopenia and thrombopathia and DIC syndrome that correlate with the stage of the disease, being most severe among the stage III patients. The patients that responded to the treatment had a great part of the hemostatic disorders corrected, and in case of no effect from the treatment - the deviations persisted, intensified and in 5 of the patients were responsible for the fatal end. The pathogenesis of the hemostatic deviations is complex and is associated with the characteristics of the basic disease and the concomitant complications.
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PMID:[Proceedings of the 7th Congress of Internal Medicine]. 665 83

Abruptio placentae tends to be accompanied by abnormal coagulation and fibrinolysis, and is known as high risk pregnancy allowing both mother and fetal lives to endanger. Blood coagulation and fibrinolytic system in abruptio placentae, in particular, sequential changes around its onset have been remained unclarified despite the progress in hematology. This permits an irregular therapeutical process for its acute clinical manifestation. In this study, observation was made of the changes of coagulation and fibrinolytic system mainly in relation to delivery, and hemorrhagic diathesis in abruptio placentae was studied. The results obtained are as follows. The studied patients were 14 cases classified into 8 multipara, 10 toxemia of pregnancy, 6 cesarean section, 11 intrauterine fetal death, and 8 complicated disseminated intravascular coagulation respectively. A moderate type demonstrating an increased serum FDP with retarded ESR and lowering in fibrinogen level were observed, but those abnormalities recovered to normal by 3 days after delivery. In serious case, observations also were made of marked decrease of fibrinogen, prolonged PT and PTT, high concentrations of serum and urinary FDP, lowering in levels of coagulation factors, attenuated platelet counts, retarded ESR, and inhibition of platelet aggregation along with thrombelastgram that showed thrombocytopenic type. All of those anomalies tended to be improved following delivery.
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PMID:[Alterations in coagulation and fibrinolytic system in abruptio placentae (author's transl)]. 706 57