Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0243026 (sepsis)
52,417 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

To determine whether or not kinin activation in the blood during severe infection with gram-negative bacteria may be related to hemodynamic abnormalities encountered, blood prekallikrein, kallikrein inhibitor and kinin values in 2l surgical patients with sepsis were compared with those in normotensive and hypotensive states. Because of reduced prekallikrein synthesis in patients with hepatic insufficiency, the normotensive and hypotensive groups were each subdivided according to the presence or absence of liver dysfunction, as indicated by elevated blood bilirubin, serum glutamic-oxalacetic transaminase or alkaline phosphatase levels. The mortality was zero in group 1, normotensive normal liver function; 80 per cent in group 2, hypotensive-normal liver function; 20 per cent in group 3, normotensive liver dysfunction, and 67 per cent in group 4, hypotensive liver dysfunction. Ultimately, the majority of deaths were due to respiratory failure. Although the blood prekallikrein level, was below normal in all groups and was significantly less in all patients with liver dysfunction, it was reduced proportionately in hypotensive patients to less than 30 per cent of the values noted in the two normotensive groups. This finding suggests prekallikrein consumption in the hypotensive groups to be the result of the process of activating kallikrein and bradykinin. This concept is supported by finding elevated kinin values, above 3 nanograms per milliliter of plasma, in only 28 per cent of those in group 1 and 12 per cent of those in group 3, while in the hypotensive patients, groups 2 and 4, the kinin level was elevated in 60 and 66 per cent, respectively.
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PMID:Kinin activation in the blood of patients with sepsis. 95 70

The effect of burn wound size on the activation of fibrinolysis, coagulation, and contact factors was analyzed in 60 thermal injury patients. Blood samples from 47 male patients and 13 female patients, (average age 37 years; range 1.5-70 years) were collected within the first 36 hours and at 5-7 days following injury. The patient population was categorized by percentage of burn (second degree and/or third degree): less than 20%, n = 22; 20%-40%, n = 18; greater than 40%, n = 20. The average percentage of burn was 32% (range, 4%-95%). The mechanism of injury was by flame (25), explosion and flame (19), scald (12), electric (3), or chemicals (1). An associated inhalation injury was present in 12 patients. The overall mortality rate was 13% (8). Sepsis or serious infection occurred in 23% (14) of the patients. On admission, 83% of the patients had normal prothrombin times (PT) and activated partial thromboplastin times (APTT). However, specific hemostatic variables showed marked changes. Admission hemostatic markers that correlated with the severity of injury were: tissue-plasminogen activator (tPA), plasminogen activator inhibitor (PAI), D-dimer (D-di), plasminogen (Plg), proteins C and S (PrC and PrS), antithrombin III (ATIII), thrombin-antithrombin complex (TAT), kallikrein (Kal:c), kinin (Kin), C1 esterase inhibitor (C1Inh), and factor VII clotting and antigen (FVII:c, FVII:ag). These data suggest that during the early course following burn injury, thrombogenicity is increased (TAT increases) because of a decrease in ATIII, PrC, and PrS; and fibrinolysis activation (D-di increases) occurs via an increase in tPA with a p value increase in PAI.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:The effect of burn wound size on hemostasis: a correlation of the hemostatic changes to the clinical state. 163 6

Alpha 2-macroglobulin (alpha 2 M) in vitro inhibits numerous proteinases that are generated during inflammatory reactions and therefore, probably plays an important role in diseases such as sepsis. To monitor the state of alpha 2 M in sepsis, we developed novel assays for functional and inactive alpha 2M. Functional alpha 2M in plasma was measured by quantitating the binding of alpha 2M to solid-phase trypsin. Inactive alpha 2M (i alpha 2M) was assessed with a monoclonal antibody, mcAb M1, that specifically reacts with a neodeterminant exposed on i alpha 2M. This mcAb in combination with chromogenic substrates was used to detect alpha 2M-proteinase complexes. Functional alpha 2M was reduced in plasma from 48 patients with clinical sepsis compared to healthy controls (p less than 0.0001). Levels of functional alpha 2M on admission and the lowest levels encountered in 23 patients with shock were lower than in 25 normotensive patients (p = 0.023 and p = 0.009, respectively). Increased levels of i alpha 2M (greater than 30 nM) at least on one occasion were found in only 4 of the 48 patients, being not different in hypotensive compared with normotensive patients, and not in patients who died compared with those who survived. Levels of functional alpha 2M correlated significantly with levels of factor XII and prekallikrein suggesting that decreases in alpha 2M at least in part were due to contact activation. Indeed, in two patients with increased i alpha 2M, complexes between alpha 2M and kallikrein were demonstrated in addition to plasmin- and thrombin-alpha 2M complexes.
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PMID:Quantification of functional and inactivated alpha 2-macroglobulin in sepsis. 170 20

Activation of the contact system has been documented in severe sepsis and hereditary angioedema, but a sensitive, specific, and quantitative assay for assessing the degree of involvement of this proteolytic enzyme cascade is not yet available. We have developed a quantitative sandwich enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) for the alpha 2-macroglobulin-kallikrein (alpha 2M-Kal) complex using an F(ab')2 derivative of a monospecific polyclonal antibody against alpha 2 M as the capture antibody and a unique murine monoclonal antibody, 13G11, against the heavy chain of kallikrein as the detector antibody. The assay does not detect complexes in normal plasma but reacts with complexes generated by activating normal plasma with dextran sulfate at 4 degrees C in a range of 5 to 375 nmol/L. A close correlation of the ELISA with an amidolytic assay for alpha 2M-Kal was documented. Patients with sepsis syndrome but negative bacterial blood cultures did not show elevated plasma complexes, whereas a majority of those with positive blood cultures did show modest elevation and a single patient with septic shock showed a very high level of alpha 2M-Kal complex. Similarly, a patient with classic hereditary angioedema (HAE) showed increased concentration of complexes on three separate occasions during attacks but normal levels between attacks. Two other HAE patients did not show elevated levels at quiescent periods. The ELISA for alpha 2M-Kal appears to be sensitive, specific, and quantitative, and it can be used to reflect the degree of contact system activation in human sepsis and in HAE attacks.
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PMID:Alpha 2-macroglobulin-kallikrein complexes detect contact system activation in hereditary angioedema and human sepsis. 171 May 16

Patients treated with high doses of interleukin-2 (IL-2) because of cancer, develop hemodynamic and vasopermeability changes, that resemble those observed in sepsis. These patients thus provide a unique opportunity to study the early events in the development of septic shock. We analysed the changes that occurred in the contact system of coagulation in plasma from 4 patients, who together received seven 12-day cycles of high doses of IL-2. Levels of factor XII and prekallikrein during the cycles progressively fell to 50 and 30% of their initial levels, respectively, whereas significant increases in plasma factor XIIa- and kallikrein-C1-inhibitor complexes were not observed (in 3 out of 211 samples slightly increased levels of both complexes were found). The reductions in factor XII and prekallikrein were only in part due to protein leakage, since levels were still significantly lower, i.e., 80 and 50%, respectively, when corrected for albumin decreases. Levels of high molecular weight kininogen (HMWK) also decreased during IL-2 therapy, however, this decrease paralleled that of albumin. SDS-PAGE analysis of plasma HMWK did not reveal increased cleavage of this protein. The reduction of factor XII and prekallikrein, corrected for protein leakage, significantly correlated with albumin levels and inversely with daily cumulative weight gain in the patients. Thus, we demonstrate that factor XII and prekallikrein decrease during IL-2 therapy. As these decreases, already observed after 1 day treatment, were disproportional to that of albumin, a negative acute phase reactant, and correlated with signs of the vascular leak syndrome, we favor the explanation that they reflected activation rather than a decreased synthesis of the contact system proteins.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Studies on the contact system of coagulation during therapy with high doses of recombinant IL-2: implications for septic shock. 187 10

The plasma kallikrein-kinin system is activated in Gram-negative sepsis and typhoid fever, two diseases in which bacterial products have been shown to initiate inflammation. Because a single intraperitoneal injection of bacterial cell wall peptidoglycan-polysaccharide polymers from group A steptococci (PG-APS) into a Lewis rat produces a syndrome of relapsing polyarthritis and anemia, we investigated changes in the role of the kallikrein-kinin system in this model of inflammation. Coagulation studies after injection of PG-APS revealed an immediate and persistent decrease in prekallikrein levels. High-molecular-weight kininogen levels decreased significantly during the acute phase and correlated with the severity of arthritis. Factor XI levels were decreased only during the acute phase. Antithrombin III levels remained unchanged, indicating that neither decreased hepatic synthesis nor disseminated intravascular coagulation caused the decreased plasma contact factors. Plasma T-kininogen (an acute phase protein) was significantly elevated during the chronic phase. PG-APS failed to activate the contact system in vitro. Thus the kallikrein-kinin system plays an important role in this experimental model of inflammation, suggesting that activation of this system may play a role in the pathogenesis of inflammatory bowel disease and rheumatoid arthritis in which bacterial products might be etiologically important.
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PMID:Role of kallikrein-kinin system in pathogenesis of bacterial cell wall-induced inflammation. 199 42

Fatal multiple organ failure after severe infection may be related to an early activation of protease cascade systems. This study aimed to relate changes in coagulation, fibrinolysis, and kallikrein to shock and outcome. Of 53 patients with severe infection, 30 did not develop shock, 12 survived septic shock, and 11 died from organ failure after septic shock. No patient had overt disseminated intravascular coagulation. We measured 17 components of the coagulation/fibrinolysis/kallikrein pathways on admission and on the next 2 days. High values for fibrinogen, factor VIII:C, von Willebrand factor antigen, and D-dimer were seen in all patients; factor XII, prekallikrein, factor VII, antithrombin, protein C, and fibronectin were low. The patients thus appeared to be hypercoagulable. These disturbances were more pronounced in septic shock survivors, who also had low plasminogen and antiplasmin, indicating ongoing fibrinolysis. Nonsurvivors of sepsis were distinguished mainly by high plasminogen activator inhibitor values; this suggests an impaired functional fibrinolysis in fatal sepsis, with possible therapeutic implications. Cryoprecipitate infusion increased the fibronectin concentration, but did not influence the other factors studied.
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PMID:Coagulation, fibrinolysis, and kallikrein systems in sepsis: relation to outcome. 250 62

On the model of musculocutaneous wound in rabbits, the effect of applicative sorption with the use of activated carbonic fibrous materials on the course of traumatic disease was studied. The total esterase activity of the blood serum, activity of alpha 1-inhibitor of proteinases, kallikrein content in the blood serum were defined. It is shown, that changes in biochemical indices are in agreement with the findings of clinical observations and outcome of traumatic disease. The use of activated carbonic fibrous material at the early period of traumatic disease contributes to its favourable course, prevents the development of complications and death of the animals from sepsis.
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PMID:[Effect of applicative-sorptive therapy on the activity of various enzymes and inhibitors of the kallikrein-kinin system in traumatic disease]. 278 68

Mediators from the coagulation system, the complement system, the kallikrein-kinin system and the arachidonic acid metabolism are made responsible for the pathogenesis of organ failure (ARDS) following sepsis. Products from these systems influence, directly or indirectly, vascular tone and permeability, especially in the pulmonary circulation. Besides these mediators, toxic oxygen species and proteases released from activated granulocytes and macrophages injure endothelial cells and provoke vascular leakage.
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PMID:[Causes and therapy of organ failure: mediators, their role and therapeutic implications as exemplified by the infected patient]. 312 23

Considerable evidence indicates that activation of the contact system of intrinsic coagulation plays a role in the pathogenesis of septic shock. To monitor contact activation in patients with sepsis, we developed highly sensitive radioimmunoassays (RIAs) for factor XIIa-Cl(-)-inhibitor (Cl(-)-Inh) and kallikrein-Cl(-)-Inh complexes using a monoclonal antibody (MoAb Kok 12) that binds to a neodeterminant exposed on both complexed and cleaved Cl(-)-Inh. Plasma samples were serially collected from 48 patients admitted to the intensive care unit because of severe sepsis. Forty percent of patients on at least one occasion had increased levels of plasma factor XIIa-Cl(-)-Inh (greater than 5 x 10(-4) U/mL) and kallikrein-Cl(-)-Inh (greater than 25 x 10(-4) U/mL), that correlated at a molar ratio of approximately 1:3. Levels of factor XII antigen in plasma and both the highest as well as the levels on admission of plasma factor XIIa-Cl(-)-Inh in 23 patients with septic shock were lower than in 25 normotensive patients (P = .015: factor XII on admission; P = .04: highest factor XIIa-Cl(-)-Inh; P = .01: factor XIIa-Cl(-)-Inh on admission). No significant differences in plasma kallikrein-Cl(-)-Inh or prekallikrein antigen were found between these patients' groups. Elevated Cl(-)-Inh complex levels were measured less frequently in serial samples from patients with septic shock than in those from patients without shock (P less than .0001). Based on these results, we conclude that plasma Cl(-)-Inh complex levels during sepsis may not properly reflect the extent of contact activation.
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PMID:Quantification of plasma factor XIIa-Cl(-)-inhibitor and kallikrein-Cl(-)-inhibitor complexes in sepsis. 326 90


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