Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0036690 (
sepsis
)
59,461
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The plasma concentration of beta-thromboglobulin was serially measured in nine patients with
septicemia
, ten patients with pneumonia and five thrombo- and granulocytopenic patients with acute leukemia. Six patients with
septicemia
out of the eight studied on days 1-3 and all eight patients studied 7-14 days after onset had an abnormal high beta-thromboglobulin level. One patient with pneumonia out of six studied on days 1-3 and six out of nine studied on 7-14 days after onset had an abnormal high value. A rising trend in plasma beta-thromboglobulin with the highest mean levels at one to two weeks after onset was common to both groups. Positive ethanol gelation, increased level of fibrin/
fibrinogen
degradation products, decreased antithrombin III, increased FVIII complex and disproportionate ratio of FVIII:C to FVIIIR:Ag were common in both groups in the early stages of the disease. All the five patients with leukemia had a lower than normal beta-thromboglobulin level throughout the study but showed in the coagulation parameters changes similar to those observed in the other groups. Judging from the commonness of abnormal beta-thromboglobulin values in the two first patient groups, low grade platelet activation is a normal response in severe infection.
...
PMID:Plasma beta-thromboglobulin in severe infection. 618 May 2
A nephelometric method is described for determination of plasminogen and two types of plasmin inhibitors in human plasma having different affinity toward plasmin. This method is based on the kinetic analysis of effects of whole plasma and plasmin inhibitor fraction obtained from plasma on the activity of exogenously added plasminogen which was determined by measuring the decrease of light scattering of fibrin suspension. With this method we have determined the activity of plasminogen and two types of inhibitors in the plasma of normal subjects and patients with high
fibrinogen
degradation product values. They include patients with various malignant tumors with DIC, chronic renal failure,
sepsis
, vascular diseases, and liver cirrhosis with hepatoma.
...
PMID:Nephelometric determination of plasminogen and plasmin inhibitors in human plasma using fibrin suspension as a substrate. 622 10
Experience with angio-access in patients with chronic end-stage renal failure undergoing haemodialysis, including those with arteriovenous fistulas constructed within the past 3 years, is reviewed. In patients in group 1, 137 fistulas were constructed; the patency rate at 2 years was 66% and at 4 years 47%. Complications were due to thrombosis, aneurysm and poor operative technique. In group 2 fistulas were constructed from synthetic material in 33 patients; the patency rate at 2 years was 44% and at 4 years 36%. Complications were due to thrombosis and
sepsis
. No correlation was found between raised
fibrinogen
levels and fistula or graft failures. Dialysis needles of different gauges were compared; the 16-gauge Terumo needle was found to cause no hemolysis and was adequate for use in dialysis.
...
PMID:Vascular access for haemodialysis--experience at Johannesburg Hospital. 623 27
A 17-year-old male with previously undiagnosed congenital Factor IX deficiency (13%) presented with gastrointestinal bleeding and a hepatic mass. Prolonged thrombin and Reptilase times, which partially corrected with CaCl2 and a discrepancy between thrombin-clottable and immunoreactive plasma
fibrinogen
, suggested a dysfibrinogenemia. Laparotomy disclosed metastatic hepatoma. Adequate hemostasis was obtained with clotting factor replacement, but wound healing was delayed. Patient
fibrinogen
purified with 2.1 M glycine migrated normally on immunoelectrophoresis and 7.5% polyacrylamide-SDS gel electrophoresis. However, fibrin monomers prepared from purified patient
fibrinogen
displayed impaired aggregation at high and low ionic strengths when compared with fibrin monomers from normal and control Factor IX deficient subjects. Aggregation of normal monomers was delayed when mixed 1:1 with patient monomers. Fibrinopeptide release was normal, and total sialic acid content was similar to that of normal and control fibrinogens. Chemotherapy, consisting of 5-FU given via intra-arterial hepatic infusion, was accompanied by significant transient clinical improvement which coincided with correction of thrombin clotting times and fibrin monomer aggregation. Reappearance of
fibrinogen
dysfunction occurred with clinical deterioration prior to death from metastatic hepatoma and
sepsis
. This case is the first to corroborate the postulated tumor marker role of dysfibrinogenemia in a patient with hepatoma by documenting a direct relationship with response to chemotherapy.
...
PMID:Acquired dysfibrinogenemia in a hemophiliac with hepatoma: resolution of fibrinogen dysfunction following chemotherapy. 626 56
Components of the plasma proteolytic enzyme systems were studied in 15 multiple trauma patients. There were 9 survivors and 6 fatal cases. All fatal cases had
sepsis
and/or post traumatic adult respiratory distress syndrome. Within the first day after trauma significantly reduced values were found for plasma prekallikrein (PKK), Hageman factor (HF) and Antithrombin III (AT III). In the survivors these parameters were normalized within the first five days after the injury. In the fatal cases, however, the same parameters remained reduced or declined during the observation period. The fatal cases also revealed a high frequency of positive ethanol gelation tests (EGT), elevated serum fibrin -
fibrinogen
degradation products (FDP) values and persisting low platelet counts. Analyses of plasma samples from both survivors and fatal cases, fractions by Sephadex G-150 gel filtration, demonstrated alpha 2-macroglobulin - plasma kallikrein complexes. These findings demonstrate activation of the kallikrein-kinin system as a part of pathological plasma proteolysis in multiple trauma patients. Persistent reductions of PKK, HF and AT III combined with positive EGT, elevated FDP values and reduced platelet counts indicate a poor prognosis.
...
PMID:Determination of components of the plasma proteolytic enzyme systems gives information of prognostic value in patients with multiple trauma. 634 78
The pathologic changes in septic shock, a disease state involving several hemodynamic and metabolic parameters, are not completely understood. Because research on animals can provide information vital to treating disease in humans, and because of the increasing constraints on clinical trials with humans, a clinically relevant animal
sepsis
model has been developed using adult male Sprague-Dawley rats.
Sepsis
was induced in large numbers of rats by IP injections of discrete quantities of live E coli organisms. The following elements were measured at specific times: MAP, CO, CVP, WBC, platelets, hemoglobin, hematocrit, PT, PTT,
fibrinogen
, clotting factors, glucose, blood gases, Ca++, Mg++, and TSP. The study shows that the model is easily replicated and relatively inexpensive, and that it can be used for detailed study in rats of several of the pathophysiological states characteristic of
sepsis
in humans.
...
PMID:Rat intraperitoneal sepsis--a clinically relevant model. 635 75
Fibronectin (FN) is a glycoprotein (disulfite-bonded dimer of 200 to 220 Kd submits) found in a soluble form in blood (concentration 250--500 microg/ml), it can be removed from it by cryoprecipitation and affinity chromatography on gelatin or heparin-agarose. It is also found in an insoluble fibrillar form as a component of connective tissue matrix like collagen, proteoglycans... FN fundamentally forms molecular complexes with collagen,
fibrinogen
or fibrin, heparin, activated factor XIII, bacteria, cellular membranes..., these various proteins binding with now well known functional "domains" on subunits. Thus FN mediates adhesion of cells to cells as well to biomaterials or tissue, cell migration and chemotactic activity, tissue stromal organization... The transformed cultured cells in presence of oncogen virus loose ability to secrete FN which contribute to their invasive tendency. FN also interacts with hemostatic and fibrinolytic systems, as component of the subendothelium (secreted, like Willbrand factor, by endothelial cells) and of platelet alpha-granules released by stimulated platelets. FN could then provoke platelet spreading on the subendothelium surface after collagen-platelet adhesion, triggered by Willebrand factor, has happened. FN is a part of the fibrinous clot. It participates in anchorage of the clot to subendothelium and mediates its colonisation by fibroblasts, first step to wound reparation. Lastly FN probably has an important role in organism defence. It acts as a non-immunological opsonin, promoting phagocytosis by RES macrophages of bacteria, cellular or fibrin fragments, immune complexes... present in blood. Plasmatic FN concentration is strongly decreased in several ill patients following major trauma, extensive burns, shock,
sepsis
, with or not evidence of DIVC, of respiratory distress... SABA and various other authors have obtained good results after injections of FN (as cryoprecipitates or concentrated fractions). It is yet necessary to confirm therapeutic role of FN.
...
PMID:[Plasma fibronectin]. 641
The clinical scenario of multiple organ failure (MOF) is reviewed and its frequent correlation with
sepsis
emphasized. It is hypothesized that MOF is produced by the formation of immune complexes (IC) in response to infection with deposition on organs such as the liver, lung, and kidney. Such immune complexes trap macrophages which can directly damage endothelium. Such a pathologic picture is in keeping with that of MOF. Granular deposits of IgG, IgM, C3, C5, and
fibrinogen
have been identified in the organs of four patients dying of MOF and
sepsis
. Similar deposits have been identified using fluorescent antibody stains in the organs of rabbits following cecal perforation. It is hypothesized that
sepsis
may produce organ failure at a distance from the site of infection via deposits of immune complexes.
...
PMID:Multiple organ failure: clinical and experimental. 644 89
The mechanism of isolated thrombocytopenia in
septicemia
is unknown, but compensated disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) has been suggested as a possible cause. To investigate this possibility, platelet counts and sensitive assays for in vivo thrombin and plasmin generation, including
fibrinogen
gel chromatography and fibrinopeptide A (FPA) assays, were obtained on 31 septicemic patients. Fifteen of 17 patients with gram-negative
septicemia
and 8 of 14 patients with gram-positive
septicemia
had thrombocytopenia. Platelet survival studied demonstrated a decreased platelet survival. In 11 of 12 patients with severe thrombocytopenia (platelet count less than 50,000mul), there was laboratory evidence of intravascular coagulation. In contrast, there was little evidence of intravascular coagulation in 8 of 11 patients with moderate thrombocytopenia (platelet counts 50,000 to less than 150,000/mul) or in 7 of 8 patients with normal platelet counts. This report indicates that while DIC accompanies thrombocytopenia in many patients with severe thrombocytopenia, there is frequently little evidence for intravascular coagulation in patients with moderate thrombocytopenia. It is apparent that factors other than intravascular thrombin must play a role in producing the thrombocytopenia of
septicemia
.
...
PMID:Thrombocytopenia in septicemia: the role of disseminated intravascular coagulation. 644 36
In 284 children with
sepsis
coagulation analyses were carried out. In
sepsis
in the postnatal period number of thrombocytes, plasminogen, antithrombin III, alpha 2-macroglobulin and factor V were initially decreased on an average, but
fibrinogen
, alpha 2-antiplasmin, the factors II and X as well as the trypsin inhibitor capacity were increased. The initially on an average reduced parameters often still considerably decreased, in order to increase after this to the norm of age within one to two weeks. The thrombocytopenia longest persists, often to the third week. The components initially found increased on an average in most cases rapidly increase and beyond the norm of age. They behave as acute phase proteins. In
sepsis
beyond the neonatal period the quality of the acute phase protein is in numerous components still more distinct than in the postnatal period. Several parameters also showed a completely other dynamics: the thrombocytopenia is of lesser size and shorter duration and is very often changed by a thrombocytosis. Here alpha 2-macroglobulin also has the quality of an acute phase protein. From the dynamics observed is concluded that disseminated intravascular coagulation processes frequently accompany the initial phase of the
sepsis
. They cause an eminent over-production of coagulation components which is limited by their production capacity and partly compensates the defects. The diversity of the constellation is explained by different sizes of consumption and compensation. The parameters in their dynamics have diagnostic valency. As far as the difference from
fibrinogen
level and number of thrombocytes is concerned it could already proved by simple means.
...
PMID:[Effect on hemostasis and thrombogenesis by septic processes especially in childhood]. 646 15
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>