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Query: UMLS:C0024523 (
malabsorption
)
7,319
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A case of
malabsorption
of vitamin K, leading to a vitamin K-dependent clotting factor deficiency that developed during the eighth gestational month, is reported. Evaluation of the coagulopathy at term showed the cause to be an obstructive hepatobiliary disorder. Given the pathophysiologic relationship between the coagulation cascade and the hepatic and biliary systems, routine measurement of the prothrombin and partial
thromboplastin
times is advised for all patients with evidence of hepatobiliary dysfunction.
...
PMID:Vitamin K-dependent clotting factor deficiency in pregnancy. 340 63
To determine the clinical usefulness of the activated partial
thromboplastin
time in screening patients before surgery, we related preoperative test results to the occurrence of hemorrhagic complications, studying all adult inpatients undergoing invasive diagnostic or therapeutic procedures at a large university hospital during a one-year period. Using clinical characteristics to divide the population into two groups according to a priori risk of hemorrhagic complications, we found that the activated partial
thromboplastin
time had no ability to predict the occurrence or absence of hemorrhage in the low-risk group, but that it was a predictor of modest strength in the high-risk group. Our data justify limiting preoperative coagulation screening to patients with active bleeding, known or clinically suspected bleeding disorders (including use of anticoagulants), liver disease,
malabsorption
, malnutrition, or other conditions associated with acquired coagulopathies and patients whose procedures may interfere with normal coagulation.
...
PMID:How well does the activated partial thromboplastin time predict postoperative hemorrhage? 372 74
An outline has been given of the major abnormalities of coagulation which can occur secondary to diseases in previously normal individuals. First, the disorders due to deficiency of the vitamin K-dependent clotting factors are described. Vitamin K deficiency can occur in the newborn, or at later stages in life when there is
intestinal malabsorption
. The
malabsorption
disorders, such as coeliac disease, together with major abdominal surgery or prolonged use of broad-spectrum antibiotics can give rise to vitamin K deficiency. Additionally, in obstructive jaundice the lack of secretion of bile salts into the upper intestine causes vitamin K
malabsorption
. The use of oral anticoagulants is associated with haemorrhage in a small proportion of patients. These patients usually have an excessively prolonged prothrombin time, due to overdosage with anticoagulants, but occasionally haemorrhage can occur from a localized bleeding site, such as a duodenal ulcer, in patients under good anticoagulant control. The large number of drugs which can interact with anticoagulants are listed, from which it can be seen that careful monitoring of all patients on oral anticoagulants must be carried out. The haemostatic defects associated with liver disease are then tabulated. In this situation abnormalities may be due to deficient synthesis of coagulation factors in hepatocellular failure, by failure of vitamin K absorption, and also by disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC). DIC occurs in hepatocellular failure, because the liver cells are normally responsible for clearing activated products of the coagulation and fibrinolytic enzyme systems. The presence of clinical haemorrhage and haemostatic breakdown in hepatic disease usually indicates a serious prognosis, but appropriate replacement therapy is indicated in this situation. Disseminated intravascular coagulation embraces a large number of clinical haemorrhagic syndromes, where intravascular activation of the coagulation system takes place accompanied by compensatory fibrinolytic activity. DIC can be initiated by intravascular release of procoagulant substances, such as tissue
thromboplastin
, or by damage to vascular endothelium and platelets. The main clinical conditions associated with DIC comprise the severe infections and septicaemias, obstetric accidents, shock and trauma, neoplasia and snake-bite envenoming. In all instances, the pathophysiological disorder of haemostasis is managed by treating the underlying disease.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Acquired coagulation disorders. 389 41
The possibility that anticoagulation with warfarin might inhibit the development of spontaneous metastases from intestinal carcinomas induced by azoxymethane (AOM) was tested in Sprague-Dawley rats with and without 60% distal small-bowel resection (DSBR). Warfarin (0.5 mg/l) was added to the drinking water from 1 week or 12 weeks postoperatively, and
thromboplastin
times were measured thereafter. AOM was given by 12 weekly s.c. injections (10 mg/kg/week), starting 1 week after DSBR. Besides increasing the sensitivity of rats to warfarin, DSBR itself caused partial anticoagulation, probably because of vitamin K
malabsorption
: at 30 weeks faecal fat was 59-93% higher, while serum B12 was 40% lower (> 0.05 P > 0.005). Adaptive growth of the jejunum and caecum after DSBR was manifested by 22-76% increases in segmental weight and surface area (P < 0.001). DSBR produced a 4-fold increase in duodenojejunal tumours at 15-25 weeks (P = 0.025) and a 76% increase in colorectal tumours at 25-35 weeks (P < 0.005). Eight of 20 control rats dying after 15 weeks had lymphatic metastases, compared with 0 of 15 rats with DSBR plus warfarin from week 1 (P = 0.005). The overall prevalence of metastases was reduced by both DSBR and warfarin, when assessed independently. Intestinal carcinogenesis induced by AOM is enhanced by the adaptive response to DSBR, but anticoagulation inhibits spontaneous metastases in this model.
...
PMID:Effects of anticoagulation and ileal resection on the development and spread of experimental intestinal carcinomas. 742 32
Patients with burn injuries exhibit multiple risk factors for the development of vitamin K deficiency, including
malabsorption
, limited enteral intake, antibiotic therapy, and multiple surgical procedures. A prospective evaluation of 48 children was conducted to evaluate serum vitamin K values during the first 4 postburn weeks. Serum levels were analyzed in relation to clinical course. Days of antibiotic (p < 0.02) and albumin therapy (p < 0.003), percentage body surface area excised (p < 0.006), and the administration of blood products (p < 0.05) were significantly correlated with serum vitamin K levels, and days of diarrhea approached statistical significance (p < 0.06). No relationship was found between serum values and prothrombin time, activated partial
thromboplastin
time, or serum albumin. Ninety-one percent of the children demonstrated serum values below expected norms. These data suggest a relationship between coagulopathy and an intact functioning gastrointestinal tract. However, the relative importance of dietary versus endogenous vitamin K produced by intestinal bacteria remains to be elucidated.
...
PMID:A prospective analysis of serum vitamin K in severely burned pediatric patients. 950 29
Coeliac disease is usually revealed by intestinal symptoms, but less frequently by deficiency symptoms. Early screening is very important to avoid with appropriate diet an intestinal lymphoma or epidermoid cancer. We report here the case of a 68-year old woman where coeliac disease was pointed out by very long Prothrombin Time (PT) and Activated Partial
Thromboplastin
Time (APTT). Clinical examination was strictly normal except for leanness, a small height, and several diarrhoea episodes 3 or 4 times a year. Other blood tests showed a macrocytic anemia, a fibrinogen level slightly above the upper limit, a decreased proteinaemia and albuminaemia, and a sideraemia at the lower normal limit. Liver tests pointed to a cytolysis. Vitamin K-dependent factors were decreased. A perfusion of vitamin-K allowed getting a normal PT. Duodenofiberscopy with biopsy allowed the diagnosis of coeliac disease. Neither lymphoma nor epidermoid cancer were detected. A gluten-free diet allowed the disappearing of digestive symptoms, weight rising and return to a normal PT. Searching for a coeliac disease is therefore relevant in aged patients even when very faint clinical or biological symptoms of
malabsorption
appear, particularly when PT is longer than the control with decreased vitamin-K dependant factors.
...
PMID:[A case of celiac disease with late diagnosis by very long prothrombin and activated partial prothrombin times]. 1535 14
A 53 year old female who was maintained on long-term warfarin therapy due to history of pulmonary embolism, repeatedly presents with an abnormally prolonged Prothrombin Time (PT) and Activated Partial
Thromboplastin
Time (APTT). After many asymptomatic episodes were corrected with Vitamin K therapy to temporarily reverse the effects of the warfarin, the cause of the apparent coagulopathy was further investigated. Factor Activity Assays of the common pathway factors II, IX, and X all revealed critically low values; below the threshold even a loading dose of warfarin is typically capable of eliciting. The patient tested strongly positive for Tissue Transglutaminase IgA, which is highly suggestive of a gluten-sensitive enteropathy. One effect of this condition is
malabsorption
due to flattened intestinal villi. The patient was determined to have an acquired vitamin K deficiency secondary to gluten-sensitive enteropathy. Her condition was exacerbated by the long-term warfarin therapy, resulting in the prolonged PT and PTT. The patient was treated with vitamin K therapy, which reversed the deficiency and corrected her abnormal coagulation results.
...
PMID:Warfarin hypersensitivity due to gluten-sensitive enteropathy: a case study. 2269 76
A 47-year old man was admitted for macroscopic hematuria and spontaneous hematomas. Laboratory results showed a prolonged partial
thromboplastin
time (PTT), a prolonged activated partial
thromboplastin
time (APTT) and a severe vitamin K deficiency. The underlying cause proved to be vitamin K
malabsorption
due to previously undiagnosed celiac disease, possibly provoked by oral antibiotic administration.
...
PMID:Macroscopic hematuria as presenting symptom of celiac disease. 3089 32