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Query: UMLS:C0020440 (
hypercapnia
)
7,939
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Intrapulmonary occult bleeding is a serious complication of anticoagulants. Diagnostic difficulties are such that this complication is rarely described: 8 cases in the literature. The authors report two new cases. In both of these patients oral anticoagulant therapy resulted in a severe haemorrhagic syndrome on a clinical (melaena and/or epistaxis) and laboratory (haemoglobin less than 9 g/100 ml and
prothrombin
time less than 10 p. 100) basis. After a period of 24 to 48 hours, an acute respiratory distress syndrome developed. There was dyspnoea without major haemoptysis, a hypoxia/
hypercapnia
syndrome and, by X-ray, the rapid development of a diffuse micronodular miliary picture. The diagnosis of intrapulmonary occult bleeding was based upon fibroscopy with bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) showing the pathological presence of large numbers of alveolar siderophages. However, the worsening of hypoxia brought about by bronchoalveolar lavage is such that careful consideration must be taken before the technique is used. Intrapulmonary occult bleeding must therefore be borne in mind in the presence of an imbalance in anticoagulant treatment complicated by respiratory distress and a reticulonodular radiological appearance.
...
PMID:[Occult intrapulmonary hemorrhage caused by anticoagulants]. 611 3
The effects of fetal hypoxemia on blood coagulation (platelet count,
prothrombin
time, partial thromboplastin time, fibrinogen, factors II, V, VI, VIII, IX, X, XI, XII, XIII and von Willebrands activities, fibrin degradation products, and fibrin monomer) were evaluated in nine chronically catheterized fetal lambs early in the third trimester of pregnancy (107-110 days gestation). Seven chronically catheterized fetal lambs of similar gestational ages served as controls. The hypoxemic episode (pO2 14 mm Hg) was maintained for 1 hr in the experimental group during which time there were only minimal changes in PCO2, arterial pressure, heart rate, and pH. Epinephrine and norepinephrine levels increased significantly in stressed animals--22 pg/ml pre- to 1025 pg/ml postepinephrine, and 475 pg/ml pre- to 2292 pg/ml postnorepinephrine. There were no significant changes in blood coagulation factor activities related to the hypoxic stress although, one fetus who experienced acidemia did develop a transient increase in fibrin monomer. Slight through significant increases in VIII coagulant activity activity (4.0%), von Willebrand activity (5.9%), and factor XII activity (4.3%) occurred in both the hypoxemic and control fetal lambs. These changes were associated with minimal increases in the white blood cell count (15%) and slight decreases in the mean arterial pressure (3.9 mm Hg) hemoglobin (1.2 g), and hematocrit (2.9%) and may have been related to the blood loss of 25% that occurred as a result of sampling in both groups. There were no differences between the hypoxic and control animals' levels of coagulation factor activities when measured during an 18-day follow-up period except for a slight increase in factor X activity (10%) in the control animals not apparent in the nine hypoxic animals. Thus an episode of severe fetal hypoxemia in the absence of hypotension, acidosis, and
hypercarbia
does not lead to acute or chronic alterations in blood coagulation factor activities in the fetal lamb.
...
PMID:Blood coagulation changes after hypoxemia: a fetal lamb model. 707 Aug 80