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Query: UMLS:C0035078 (
renal failure
)
31,970
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Hemorrhage, head injury, and multiple organ dysfunction are the most frequent causes of mortality in patients who experience severe injury. Acceleration of the coagulation cascade is known to result in hemorrhage secondary to disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) and end-organ dysfunction, as manifest by pulmonary and
renal failure
. Few studies have been conducted to evaluate the effects of injury on the endogenous anticoagulants that inhibit excessive coagulation activation. We evaluated a group of patients following severe injury and found that procoagulant markers (prothrombin fragment 1.2, thrombin antithrombin complexes, and D dimers) were significantly elevated for the population as a whole. Levels of circulating endogenous anticoagulants [antithrombin (AT) and
protein C
] were relatively unchanged for the total population. However, patients with adverse outcomes [DIC and adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS)] had significant reductions in AT and
protein C
activities. Decreased levels of AT and
protein C
8 hours after admission served as independent predictors of both DIC and ARDS. Prospective, randomized studies should be conducted to evaluate the effect of supplementation of these factors after severe injury has occurred.
...
PMID:Acquired antithrombin deficiency following severe traumatic injury: rationale for study of antithrombin supplementation. 915 18
A 19-year-old woman presented with purpura fulminans and septic shock; subsequently, progressive coagulopathy, widespread purpura fulminans associated with meningococcemia, severe shock, respiratory, and
renal failure
developed. This clinical course was associated with depletion of functional
protein C
levels to < 5%. We describe her clinical course and therapy with human recombinant
activated protein C
.
...
PMID:Human recombinant activated protein C in meningococcal sepsis. 1179 69
Calciphylaxis is a small vessel vasculopathy involving mural calcification with intimal proliferation, fibrosis, and thrombosis. This syndrome occurs predominantly in individuals with
renal failure
and results in ischemia and necrosis of skin, subcutaneous fat, visceral organs, and skeletal muscle. The syndrome causes significant morbidity in the form of infection, organ failure, and pain. Mortality rates are high. In individuals with
renal failure
, risk factors for the development of calciphylaxis include female sex, Caucasian race, obesity, and diabetes mellitus. Many cases occur within the first year of dialysis treatment. Several recent reports demonstrate that prolonged hyperphosphatemia and/or elevated calcium x phosphorus products are associated with the syndrome. Protein malnutrition increases the likelihood of calciphylaxis, as does warfarin use and hypercoagulable states, such as
protein C
and/or protein S deficiency. Recent advances in diagnostic tools and therapeutic strategies have helped in the management of patients with calciphylaxis.
...
PMID:Calciphylaxis: emerging concepts in prevention, diagnosis, and treatment. 1210 Apr 55
HEPARIN-INDUCED THROMBOCYTOPENIA (HIT): Management of heparin-induced thrombocytopenia (HIT) and treatment options have significantly changed recently. Heparin may induce two types of thrombocytopenia. Type I, occurring earlier with a much higher rate of incidence (5-30%), is characterized by mild thrombocytopenia without significant clinical manifestations. Type II, is less frequent (0.5-2%), life threatening immune type, develops following a period of minimum 5-7 days upon introduction of heparin therapy (patients earlier treated with heparin are excluded). Type II heparin-induced thrombocytopenia with severely reduced platelet count may be clinically manifested by thrombosis in 20-50% cases within the period of 30 days. HIT is suspected in persons resistant to heparin with relatively reduced platelet count, though HIT is described in person with normal platelet counts, as well. None of available assays used for HIT detection is completely reliable. Sensitivity of a highly specific platelet aggregation assay is only 36%, sensitivity and specificity of 14C-serotonin release assays amounts to 95%, while ELISA using a heparin/platelet factor-4 target has a sensitivity of 85%. Thus, it is sometimes necessary to combine functional and antigen assays. Furthermore, new classes of antigen assays, like antibody detection tests of complexes between heparin and neutrophil-activating peptide-2 as well as those between heparin and interleukin-8, have been used. CURRENT THERAPY OPTIONS: Current therapy options exclude formerly applied low-molecular-weight heparins due to the existing cross-reactivity of 80-100%. Danaparoid sodium exhibits in vitro cross-reactivity of 10-61%, clinically manifested in less than 5% of patients. Two drugs are drugs of choice in HIT type II treatment: lepirudin, especially in patients without
renal failure
, and argatroban, particularly in patients with
renal failure
. The following procedures and agents are also efficient: asmapheresis in the first four days, high-dose intravenous gammaglobulin, antiaggregans, especially ADP antagonists, aspirin, dipirydamole, dextran, prostacyclin analagoues, thrombolytic therapy as well as thromboembolectomy. Oral anticoagulants are not administered in active HIT type II, in deep vein thrombosis with high international normalized ratio (INR) and thrombin-antithrombin complexes, and low
protein C
levels to avoid the possibility of venous limb gangrene development. They can be administered in a stable phase, when the thrombin generation is controlled by previous administration of one of the above-mentioned alternative anticoagulants.
...
PMID:[Heparin-induced type II thrombocytopenia--new views on diagnosis and therapy]. 1456 48
Catastrophic antiphospholipid syndrome (CAPS) is a severe and rare variant of antiphospholipid syndrome (APS) characterized by acute multiorgan failure due to small vessel thrombi in patients with positive antiphospholipid antibodies. We report a fatal case of catastrophic antiphospholipid syndrome in a young woman with a history of polymyositis and Hodgkin lymphoma. The patient was admitted to hospital because of severe foot pain following several weeks of skin ulcerations. Doppler ultrasonography showed evidence of arterial ischemia of the both lower extremities. Despite anticoagulation, immunosuppression, plasmapheresis and antibiotic therapy, she developed cutaneous gangrene, retroperitoneal hematoma, ileus, and acute respiratory and
renal failure
that resulted in death. Autopsy showed multifocal vascular injury and microthrombi with associated hemorrhages and infarcts in multiple organs. The patient had normal levels of functional
protein C
and protein S and a normal level of plasma homocysteine. Tests for common thromophilic gene mutations including prothrombin 20210, factor V Leiden 1691, and methylene tetrahydrofolate reductase 677 were negative. To our knowledge, this is the first CAPS patient with molecular studies for genetic prothrombotic mutations. Our report showed that there was no association between the development of CAPS and inherited thromophilia.
...
PMID:Catastrophic antiphospholipid syndrome: a rare cause of disseminated microvascular thrombotic injury - a case report with pathological and molecular correlative studies. 1574 23
Sepsis is a systemic inflammatory response to the presence of infection, mediated via the production of many cytokines, including tumour necrosis factor (TNF-), interleukin (IL)-6, and IL-1, which cause changes in the circulation and in the coagulation cascade. There is stagnation of blood flow and poor oxygenation, subclinical coagulopathy with elevated D-dimers, and increased production of superoxide from nitric oxide synthase. All of these changes favour endothelial apoptosis and necrosis as well as increased oxidant stress. Reduced levels of
activated protein C
, which is normally anti-inflammatory and antiapoptotic, can lead to further tissue injury. Cirrhotic patients are particularly susceptible to bacterial infections because of increased bacterial translocation, possibly related to liver dysfunction and reduced reticuloendothelial function. Sepsis ensues when there is overactivation of pathways involved in the development of the sepsis syndrome, associated with complications such as
renal failure
, encephalopathy, gastrointestinal bleed, and shock with decreased survival. Thus the treating physician needs to be vigilant in diagnosing and treating bacterial infections in cirrhosis early, in order to prevent the development and downward spiral of the sepsis syndrome. Recent advances in management strategies of infections in cirrhosis have helped to improve the prognosis of these patients. These include the use of prophylactic antibiotics in patients with gastrointestinal bleed to prevent infection and the use of albumin in patients with spontaneous bacterial peritonitis to reduce the incidence of renal impairment. The use of antibiotics has to be judicious, as their indiscriminate use can lead to antibiotic resistance with potentially disastrous consequences.
...
PMID:Sepsis in cirrhosis: report on the 7th meeting of the International Ascites Club. 1583 23
Human
activated protein C
(
APC
) is a serineprotease and one of the most important physiological inhibitors of the coagulation system. Apart from anticoagulative effects, profibrinolytic and anti-inflammatory modes of action have been reported for
APC
. The administration of recombinant human
activated protein C
(rhAPC), drotrecogin alfa (activated), Xigris, to patients with severe sepsis and sepsis-induced multi-organ failure reduced mortality in large clinical trials. Anti-apoptotic and immunomodulatory effects of rhAPC have been examined in in vitro experiments and in experimental animal studies. Moreover, a reduction of endothelial cell permeability, enhanced endothelial cell survival as well as improvements of microcirculatory disorders have been proposed for rhAPC. The manifold mechanisms of action of
APC
may give reasons for its application in diseases other than sepsis, which are characterized by endothelial and microcirculatory dysfunction, e.g. acute pulmonary or
renal failure
, ischemic stroke, ischemia-reperfusion injury and acute pancreatitis. A better understanding of the anti-inflammatory, anti-apoptotic and immunomodulatory modes of action of
APC
could be relevant for dosing and mode of application and may lead to a broadening of the indication field for rhAPC.
...
PMID:[Mechanisms of action of recombinant human activated Protein C]. 1652 Sep 28
A male patient, 29 years old, was admitted to our unit with purpura fulminans, coagulation deficiency,
renal failure
and subsequent septic shock accompanied by respiratory insufficiency in the absence of meningeal signs. The serum levels of endogenous
protein C
, ATIII and calcium were well below the norm. The bacteriological examination revealed the presence of gram-negative diplococci. The onset of adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) revealed aa early complication of the meningococcal sepsis. Forty-eight hours after being admitted, the recombinant
protein C
infusion was started at a dose of 24 microg/kg/h for the duration of 96 h. The skin lesions regressed, starting from the ecchymosis and the edema of the face, trunk and auricular pavilions. A week after the onset of the symptomatology the chest X-ray appeared clear, the renal function had normalised, and the signs of shock had disappeared.
...
PMID:Purpura fulminans during meningococcal sepsis treated with Drotrecogin alpha. A clinical case. 1657 37
Calciphylaxis is an uncommon disease characterized by calcification of dermal vessels that determines skin necrosis. Calciphylaxis has been almost exclusively reported in association with
renal failure
and altered phosphor-calcium metabolism. Only a few cases have been described in hyperparathyroidism, malignancies, and, recently, cirrhosis. We report a patient that developed calciphylaxis related to end-stage alcoholic cirrhosis, without any alteration in the phosphocalcic and parathyroid hormone metabolisms. Possible contributing factors were repeated albumin infusions and low levels of
protein C
and S.
...
PMID:Calciphylaxis associated with alcoholic cirrhosis. 1668 92
Streptococcal toxic shock syndrome (STSS) associated with a group A beta hemolytic streptococcal infection was described 18 y ago. Since then, although the pathophysiology of the syndrome has been clarified, mortality can be as high as 80%. A middle-aged female developed STSS associated with a group A streptococcal pneumonia. Laboratory studies confirmed respiratory and
renal failure
as well as disseminated intravascular coagulation with a striking reduction in endogenous procoagulants. The patient, probably due to her HLA DRB1*14 haplotype was unable to generate anti-streptococcal antibodies. She was treated with appropriate antimicrobial therapy together with intravenous gamma globulin and drotrecogin or
activated protein C
. Her response to this combined therapy was accompanied by a rapid resolution of the multiorgan failure and correction of the accompanying disseminated intravascular coagulation. This rapid response to treatment supports the hypohesis that several host factors including the immune response and loss of procoagulants determine the development and severity of the toxic shock syndromes. Further studies with this combined approach appear warranted.
...
PMID:An early favorable outcome of streptococcal toxic shock syndrome may require a combination of antimicrobial and intravenous gamma globulin therapy together with activated protein C. 1714 61
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