Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0036690 (sepsis)
59,461 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) is a complex pulmonary clinicopathologic condition associated with pulmonary endothelial injury and blood coagulation activation. In patients with ARDS from all causes, factor VII levels were significantly reduced. Patients with ARDS caused by sepsis had more evidence of intravascular coagulation and fibrinolysis than did patients with trauma-related ARDS by having significantly (p less than or equal to 0.05) increased prothrombin times, activated partial thromboplastin times, and fibrin degradation products, and decreased antithrombin III concentration. We sought to determine whether the proteins of the contact system of plasma proteolysis (factor XII, prekallikrein, high molecular weight kininogen, and C1 inhibitor) were also activated after acute lung injury. Patients with ARDS caused by either trauma or sepsis had significantly (p less than or equal to 0.01) reduced factor XII levels, high molecular weight kininogen functional activity, prekallikrein activity, and prekallikrein antigen levels compared with controls. In both the sepsis-related and trauma-related ARDS groups, C1 inhibitor activity was significantly reduced but C1 inhibitor antigen levels were significantly elevated from control. These findings showed that the proteins of the contact system were more extensively activated in ARDS than were the proteins that contribute to later reactions in intravascular coagulation and fibrinolysis. Activation of the contact system proteins could be the result of endothelial injury occurring as part of ARDS. Intravascular coagulation and fibrinolysis in patients with ARDS also arise from components independent from contact system activation.
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PMID:Activation of the contact system of plasma proteolysis in the adult respiratory distress syndrome. 339 29

Infected patients with hematological disorders were treated with the combination of cefmenoxime (CMX) and cefsulodin (CFS). This therapy was done on 74 patients, of whom 38 (51%) had acute myelocytic leukemia, 14 (19%) malignant lymphoma, 7 (9%) acute lymphocytic leukemia, 5 aplastic anemia, 4 adult T cell leukemia, 4 chronic myelocytic leukemia, 1 multiple myeloma and 1 histiocytic medullary reticulosis. Complicated infections included 5 cases of septicemia, 41 cases of suspected septicemia, 19 cases of respiratory tract infection, 2 with anal abscess, 1 with urinary tract infection and others. The obtained results were as follows: Clinical effectiveness of the combination therapy was excellent in 17 cases (23.0%), good in 24 (32.4%) and poor in 33 (44.6%). Total clinical efficacy rate was 55.4%. Clinical efficacy rate was 40% against septicemias, 51.2% against suspected septicemias and 57.9% against respiratory tract infections. Causative pathogens were isolated in only 21 cases (28.4%): Gram-positive bacteria in 9 cases, Gram-negative bacteria in 11 and fungus in 1. About half of the Gram-negative bacteria belonged to Pseudomonas sp. The efficacy rate of this combination therapy against Gram-negative bacterial infections was 72.7% but the rate against Gram-positive bacterial infections were only 33.3%. Only in 1 case, this combination therapy was discontinued because of drug eruption. Abnormal laboratory findings were observed in 5 cases: Elevation of BUN in 3, GOT and GPT in 1 and prolongation of activated partial thromboplastin time in 1. In conclusion, this combination therapy of CMX and CFS is useful and safe against infections complicated by hematological disorders.
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PMID:[Clinical evaluation of a combination therapy using cefmenoxime and cefsulodin on infections complicated by hematological disorders. Tohkai Research Group on Infections in Hematopoietic Disorders]. 348 23

The author analyses the reported data and his own findings concerned with the involvement of mononuclear phagocytes in the regulation of hemostasis and in the pathogenesis of a number of frequently occurring forms of the hemostatic system pathology. The content of monocytic thromboplastin was measured in 56 patients with the intravascular blood coagulation syndrome of varying etiology. Production of monocytic thromboplastin reached the highest degree in patients with purulent conditions whereas in patients presenting with the terminal stage of sepsis, it did not exceed normal or even dropped down, which may be connected with depletion of monocytes because of their preliminary hyperactivation.
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PMID:[Mononuclear phagocytes, the hemostasis system and the intravascular coagulation syndrome]. 353 69

Gram-negative septic shock remains a major clinical problem. One frequently encountered complication of sepsis is disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC). The present study was to determine in an Escherichia coli endotoxemia awake rat model the efficacy of antithrombin-III (AT-III) prophylaxis and to explore the role of DIC in the pathogenesis of endotoxemia. We demonstrated that DIC occurs very early, before the appearance of detectable serious abnormalities in cardiovascular, metabolic, and biochemical variables indicative of organ damage or dysfunction; AT-III prophylaxis significantly ameliorates DIC, as evidenced by completely preventing the fall in plasma fibrinogen concentration and significantly limiting the increases in prothrombin time and activated partial thromboplastin time after 4 hours of endotoxemia; and AT-III prophylaxis dramatically increases permanent survival. Results of this study suggest that AT-III prophylaxis is very protective above a threshold dosage in an endotoxemic rat model and that protection is in part due to ameliorating DIC. Our data also suggest that DIC occurs very early during endotoxemia and may in part be responsible for the pathogenesis of endotoxemia in the rat. We conclude that AT-III prophylaxis may be efficacious in conditions of impending DIC, such as gram-negative septicemia/endotoxemia.
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PMID:Protection against disseminated intravascular coagulation and death by antithrombin-III in the Escherichia coli endotoxemic rat. 354 29

Rats were subjected to gram-negative septicemia induced by cecal perforation or were sham-operated. Thromboplastin values increased in blood monocytes (40-fold), peritoneal macrophages (115-fold) pleural macrophages (5-fold), splenic macrophages (3-fold), and lung alveolar macrophages (1.4-fold) in septic animals as compared to controls. In septic animals disseminated intravascular coagulation was evidenced by a significant (p less than 0.05) fall in fibrinogen, factor VII, X and platelets. A simultaneous and significant (p less than 0.05) decrease in thromboplastin content of tissue-specimens from lung and spleen was observed in rats with septicemia, whereas increased thromboplastin values were demonstrated in tissue-samples from cecum - the infectious focus. This might reflect mobilization of mononuclear phagocytes in favour of the site of infection.
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PMID:Experimental gram-negative septicemia: thromboplastin generation in mononuclear phagocytes from different anatomical sites. 366 Mar 44

The relationship between mononuclear phagocyte thromboplastin activity, microorganisms and levels of endotoxin in peritoneal fluid and splanchnic and systemic circulation was evaluated during experimental endogenous gram-negative peritonitis in the rat. Significant rise in thromboplastin activity of mononuclear phagocytes was demonstrated in all three compartments. This newly synthesized thromboplastin is a trigger for important biologic systems such as the coagulation cascade, and thus may play a major role in the development of disseminated intravascular coagulation so often occurring in gram-negative sepsis. It probably also participates in the formation of fibrous intraabdominal adhesions. Aerobic and anaerobic microorganisms together with endotoxin were detected already 1 1/2 hours after induction of peritonitis, and subsequently were found to increase in parallel fashion. Determination of endotoxin is a rapid and seemingly reliable method for early detection of gram-negative infection and thus may be of clinical value.
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PMID:Mononuclear phagocyte thromboplastin, bacterial counts and endotoxin levels in experimental endogenous gram-negative sepsis. 373 43

Tissue thromboplastin generation in monocytes was studied during various stages of Escherichia coli endotoxinaemia in pigs. The pigs were monitored in halothane anaesthesia and mechanically ventilated. Blood was sampled from the superior caval vein before and during endotoxin infusion and up to 6 hours after its start. Monnuclear leukocytes were harvested with Lymphoprep separation and monocyte counts were made, using TRITC-labelled sheep erythrocytes, acridine orange and a fluorescence microscope. Thromboplastin was quantified in a two-stage assay by incubating the test sample together with purified factor X, factor VII and Ca++. The generated factor Xa was thereafter assayed. There was statistically significant increase of tissue thromboplastin activity in monocytes after endotoxin infusion. Maximum level was reached at the end of the infusion and was maintained throughout the observation period. Decrease occurred in platelets, leukocytes, antithrombin III, fibrinogen and clotting factors V, VII and VIII, and clotting time was prolonged. These findings indicated significant disseminated intravascular coagulation. The endotoxin-stimulated monocytes with their elevated tissue thrombo-plastin activity thus may play an important part in development of the DIC which so often follows septicemia.
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PMID:Tissue thromboplastin generation in circulating mononuclear phagocytes and development of coagulation disorders during E. coli endotoxinaemia in pigs. 392 66

Factors associated with prolongation of the prothrombin time were analyzed in 94 patients with intra-abdominal sepsis. Patients were randomized prospectively to receive either the combination of tobramycin and clindamycin (TM/C) or moxalactam (MOX). This paper presents a retrospective review designed to compare the frequency of prolonged clotting times and to analyze predisposing factors. Prothrombin time (PT) prolongation occurred more frequently in patients given moxalactam (19 of 47 patients) than in patients given the combination of tobramycin and clindamycin (9 of 47 patients) (p less than 0.05). Prolongation of the partial thromboplastin time (PTT) occurred in all patients with a prolonged PT. Liver disease, upper gastrointestinal surgery, and use of cimetidine were more frequent in those patients with abnormal PT/PTT values (p less than 0.05). Two moxalactam-treated patients with subsequent PT/PTT prolongation had individual clotting factors assayed before moxalactam treatment and at the time of detection of the abnormal PT. The activity of clotting factors II, VII, VIII, IX, X, and XII was reduced during MOX therapy. Treatment with vitamin K reversed the abnormality. In view of underlying abnormalities and rapid response to parenteral vitamin K, the mechanism is probably an acute vitamin K deficiency superimposed upon chronic vitamin K deficiency. In patients with intra-abdominal infection, those treated with MOX are more likely to develop abnormal PT than those treated with TM/C. Since abnormal PT/PTT was common even in TM/C patients, supplemental vitamin K should be considered for all seriously ill, older patients with abdominal infections.
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PMID:Clinical risk factors for prolonged PT/PTT in abdominal sepsis patients treated with moxalactam or tobramycin plus clindamycin. 396 31

Central venous plasma concentrations of thromboxane B2 (TXB2) the stable metabolite of the vasoconstrictor platelet aggregator thromboxane A2, were measured in 12 patients with septic shock. In 8 patients dying with septic shock the concentration of plasma TXB2 (912 +/- 250 pg/ml) was ten times higher than that in 4 survivors of septic shock (92 +/- 25 pg/ml) and 6 controls (91 +/- 18 pg/ml). Prothrombin time and partial thromboplastin time were significantly prolonged in nonsurvivors compared with survivors. Similarly, the alveolar-arterial oxygen gradient was significantly raised in nonsurvivors (233 +/- 39 mm Hg) compared with survivors (112 +/- 47 mm Hg). This study demonstrates that the metabolism of arachidonic acid to thromboxanes is increased in patients dying of septic shock and this raises the possibility that thromboxanes may be involved in the disseminated intravascular coagulation and respiratory distress syndrome associated with severe sepsis.
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PMID:Plasma thromboxane concentrations are raised in patients dying with septic shock. 612 85

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.
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PMID:[Heparin and antiheparin in childhood. 3. Heparin level measurements and their importance in heparin monitoring]. 619 49


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