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Query: UMLS:C0036690 (
sepsis
)
59,461
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) is a syndrome caused by the systemic generation of thrombin. Most cases are due to pathological activation of the intrinsic coagulation systems (e.g. in
sepsis
), and/or the extrinsic system (e.g. in malignancy and head trauma). Diagnosis is made by finding abnormalities in at least 3 of 4 laboratory values, namely prothrombin time, platelet count, fibrinogen and fibrinogen/fibrin degradation products. The most common clinical manifestation of DIC is bleeding, with thrombosis in less than 10% of acute cases but more frequently encountered in chronic DIC associated with malignancy. Acute DIC must first be treated by specific therapy of the underlying disease and general support measures. If serial clinical and laboratory monitoring improves, no further treatment is required. If severe or life-threatening haemorrhage occurs or a thrombotic event ensues, heparin anticoagulation followed by aggressive replacement with platelets, fresh plasma and possibly cryoprecipitate is indicated.
Heparin
doses should be 'therapeutic' (i.e. adequate to overcome the coagulant forces that may have produced a relative heparin-resistant state in the blood). Chronic DIC with haemorrhage, or more usually thrombosis, should also be treated with heparin; warfarin is ineffective. If DIC persists because, for example, a tumour does not regress, long term outpatient subcutaneous heparin therapy may be required.
...
PMID:Disseminated intravascular coagulation. Approach to treatment. 128 66
We report two cases of adrenal hemorrhage and review 17 others that were confirmed by hormone measurements and computed tomography. Precipitating factors included heparin therapy, surgery, hypotension, and
sepsis
.
Heparin
-associated thrombocytopenia may be an underappreciated cause of adrenal hemorrhage. Despite the availability of computed tomography, adrenal hemorrhage mimics many other diseases, and an early diagnosis remains difficult.
...
PMID:Adrenal insufficiency secondary to adrenal hemorrhage. Two case reports and a review of cases confirmed by computed tomography. 218 38
A 66-year-old male with chronic alcoholic liver injury was admitted on July 27, 1986 to our hospital with complaints of high fever, convulsion and skin erythema. He had consumed raw fish 3 days before, and had a scratch wound over the right arm and left leg because he had slipped in a small stream in the woods the day before admission. He was already in shock state with
sepsis
of V. vulnificus and DIC on admission. Although the treatment with ABPC, CP, CAZ, MINO for
sepsis
, and
Heparin
& Antithrombin III for DIC was immediately begun, he died only 10 hours after admission. On autopsy, the skin lesion revealed phlegmon with necrotizing angitis and the liver showed fatty changes with Mallory's body. The causative organism was detected from the blood and on autopsy from the skin wound, bile juice, liver, spleen, kidney and bone marrow, and its type was determined as a V. vulnificus serovar 4. It was suspected that the route of infection in this case was the raw fish rather than via the wound because the water in which he had been wounded was fresh water and the bacterium was not detected from the water, shells, nor moss existing there.
...
PMID:[A case of fatal sepsis due to Vibrio vulnificus]. 218 37
Of 27 patients admitted to our level I trauma center with acute disruption of the thoracic aorta, two patients died of exsanguination before aortic repair. One patient had massive leakage from the aneurysm after aortography and died during surgery. All patients suffered from multiple injuries. Eighty-three percent of the patients had major operations in addition to the aortic repair. "Clamp and sew" technique was used in 18 patients (75%), two of whom had multiple tears of the aortic arch.
Heparin
-coated shunts were used in five patients (20.8%), and a cardiopulmonary bypass was performed in one patient who had multiple tears. Three postoperative deaths were related to polytrauma, cardiogenic shock, and
sepsis
. Paraplegia developed in three patients, two of whom had multiple aortic lesions necessitating longer ischemia time during the repair. Only one patient had complete neurologic deficit at the 1-year follow-up. In our series, neither surgical procedure proved superior. We conclude that the "clamp and sew" technique for repair of the disrupted thoracic aorta may allow for a more favorable outcome.
...
PMID:Traumatic disruptions of the thoracic aorta: treatment and outcome. 223 67
Purpura fulminans is an uncommon catastrophic syndrome that occurs in children, typically one to four weeks after a seemingly benign infectious process. The child usually presents with a high fever, purpuric ecchymosis, hypotension, disseminated intravascular coagulation, and gangrene of the extremities. We have recently treated six children, whose mean age was 22 months; three were male and three were female. Five of the six had a change of mental status upon initial examination. Their mean temperature was 104 degrees F. All six children had purpuric involvement of their extremities; three had involvement of their hands, two had involvement of their faces, and two had involvement of their trunks. All had absent palpable pulses and sluggish capillary refill in the involved hands and feet. Two patients died shortly after admission as a result of severe end-stage
sepsis
. The platelet counts in these two patients, and the white blood cell counts were markedly depressed. The mean platelet count of the survivors was 370,000 and the mean white blood cell count was 25,000. Lumbar punctures were positive for bacterial meningitis in five patients and viral meningitis in one patient. All patients were treated with intravenous heparin. Of the four survivors, two lost significant tissue and required multiple plastic reconstructive procedures, and two improved on heparin alone with no tissue loss. In addition to systemic support and intravenous antibiotics, the mainstay of treatment is one of immediate heparinization and a continuous heparin drip.
Heparin
prevents subsequent small vessel thrombosis and limits tissue loss due to ongoing purpura. Conservative management of the purpuric lesions is the treatment of choice until final demarcation occurs.
...
PMID:The surgical implications of purpura fulminans. 234 Feb 49
Thrombocytopenia is a frequent and sometimes insidious complication of anticoagulant therapy with heparin. Two types of heparin-induced thrombocytopenia with a distinct aetiology have been recognized. Type I is characterized by a mild thrombocytopenia of early onset which requires careful monitoring but usually not the cessation of heparin therapy. The mild thrombocytopenia is probably due to the mild pro-aggregatory properties of heparin and can be more severe in the presence of other predisposing factors, e.g.
sepsis
. Type II heparin-induced thrombocytopenia is more severe and usually occurs after a period of 7-10 days.
Heparin
therapy should be ceased immediately and other anticoagulant therapy initiated. The thrombocytopenia is believed to be due to the development of a heparin-dependent antibody that causes platelet aggregation and release. The precise mechanism of heparin-dependent antibody-platelet interaction is still not entirely clear but probably involves the binding of an antibody-heparin immune complex to the platelet Fc receptor.
...
PMID:Heparin-induced thrombocytopenia. 264 53
A clinicopathological study was undertaken in 15 cases of massive hepatic necrosis after shock. The GOT and GPT level exceeded 1000 units in 10 cases. The 15 cases consisted of 3 diagnosed as fulminant hepatitis clinically and 12 diagnosed as disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) or multiple systemic organ failure (MOF) from the unremarkableness of liver dysfunction. It was noteworthy that
sepsis
and surgery were closely associated with these lesions. The weight of the liver at autopsy ranged from 800 to 2,700 g. Liver necrosis was macroscopically characterized by clear demarcation of the necrotic areas sharply separated from the surrounding liver parenchyma, showing the appearance of so-called "map-like necrosis". Microscopically, the lesions in these subjects showed mainly the pattern of centrilobular necrosis. As observed in the burn shock case (case 12), the shock which provoked in different phases of time seemed to have repeated its attack. These liver necroses were considered to result from severe systemic circulatory disturbance or intrahepatic circulatory disturbance. The possibility is indicated that the generalized or univisceral Shwartzman reaction, and repeated and combined severe shock participated in the pathogenesis. Fibrin thrombi aggrevate tissue perfusion and accelerate anoxia.
Heparin
therapy seemed effective in these cases if administered at an appropriate time.
...
PMID:Fatal hepatic necrosis after shock. 371 91
Antiserum raised to a rough mutant Escherichia coli, termed J5 (anti-J5 RS), protected against lethal gram-negative bacterial
sepsis
in a guinea pig model when animals were pretreated with both antiserum and heparin. This same model was used to examine and compare the effects of pretreatment with anti-J5 RS, normal rabbit serum (NRS), or saline, each +/- heparin on physiologic and metabolic parameters during a septic insult. Results demonstrated that leukopenia and thrombocytopenia occurred to a similar degree in all pretreatment groups; no significant leuko- or thrombostasis was noted on examination of histologic specimens; complement activation was maximal in those animals receiving anti-J5 RS alone without heparin; the most abnormal amino acid profile was present in the NRS + heparin group; and only the anti-J5 RS + heparin group did not develop glomerular lesions indicative of disseminated intravascular coagulation. A complement-mediated cell aggregation-type injury does not appear to occur in this model. It is hypothesized that both excessive complement and coagulation system activation occur after bacterial challenge when antibody directed against the bacteria is present (anti-J5 RS) leading to antigen-antibody complex formation and complement and coagulation cascade activation.
Heparin
may block either or both these cascade systems allowing enhanced, antibody-mediated opsonization and clearance of blood-borne bacteria, thus preventing end-organ alterations and organ failure during
sepsis
when combined with anti-J5 RS.
...
PMID:Metabolic effects of pretreatment with Escherichia coli J5 antiserum on guinea pig gram-negative bacterial sepsis. 388 2
In spite of all the scientific and technical advances in recent years, shock that is not rapidly correctable with fluid can have a morbidity rate exceeding 80%. Consequently awareness of such precipitating factors as
sepsis
and early diagnosis and treatment are essential. Treatment should be rapid and should follow a previously outlined protocol. Such protocols should include correction of the precipitating problem and aggressive resuscitation to assure adequate ventilation and oxygenation of the blood and optimal oxygen delivery to the tissues. Fluid and blood should be given as needed until filling pressures begin to rise rapidly with further fluid infusion. With hemorrhagic shock in previously healthy individuals, a hemoglobin level of 10.0 g/dL is usually adequate. In older, septic, or cardiogenic shock patients, a hemoglobin level of 12.5 to 14.0 may be preferable. If an optimal preload does not increase cardiac output to normal or higher levels, inotropic agents should be used. If shock still persists, one must be sure that the arterial pH is not excessively high or low. Glucocorticoids may then be given in low dose (200 mg hydrocortisone) in case some degree of adrenal insufficiency is present. They can also be given in high doses (equivalent to 150 mg/kg hydrocortisone) early in septic shock primarily to prevent excess complement activation and to preserve membrane integrity. Vasopressors may occasionally be required if there is excessive vasodilation, especially if there is persistent hypotension in the presence of high-grade coronary or cerebral artery stenosis. Vasodilators may be used to try to correct myocardial ischemia (nitroglycerin), excessive preload (nitroglycerin), or excessive afterload (nitroprusside or hydralazine). Combinations of vasodilators and inotropic agents may be required in some patients with high systemic vascular resistance and persistently low cardiac outputs. Mechanical assist with IABP can be of great value in persistent cardiogenic shock. Diuretics may occasionally help prevent renal failure in patients who are persistently oliguric after blood flow and pressure are restored.
Heparin
is occasionally of value if DIC develops with no concomitant fibrinolysis. Antibiotics are important in septic shock and may also be important if persistent shock has reduced gastrointestinal mucosal integrity so that bacteria and bacterial products can enter the portal system.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Science and shock: a clinical perspective. 389 56
Measurements of the heparin level were made under continuous anticoagulation in a total of 7 patients. For the purpose of monitoring heparin the coagulation time values were determined parallelly. Except a patient with a
sepsis
and a 7 days old newborn baby the desired prolongation for the partial thromboplastin time and the reaction time of thrombelastogram resulted from heparin titres lying within the range of 0.2-0.7 U/ml of plasma. Even after applying depot preparations there was a relatively good correspondance of heparin level curves and coagulation parameters. In childhood the partial thromboplastin time is primarily suitable for monitoring the heparin therapy.
Heparin
half-life times calculated during the transumbilical exchange transfusion in 7 children amounted to values ranging between 40-110 minutes. In addition to checking low dose heparinizing, measurements of the level are suitable for deriving dosage standards for neutralizing heparin effects by protamine sulfate.
...
PMID:[Heparin and antiheparin in childhood. 3. Heparin level measurements and their importance in heparin monitoring]. 619 49
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