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)

In order to assess precisely the fibrinolytic state in disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC), plasma levels of fibrinogenolysis products (FgDP), fibrinolysis products (FbDP) and fibrinogenolysis plus fibrinolysis products (TDP) were measured with newly developed enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays based on monoclonal antibodies in 72 patients with DIC at presentation. Not only FbDP and TDP but also FgDP were markedly elevated in patients with DIC. When analyzed according to the underlying disease categories, the relative proportion of FgDP to TDP was high in patients with acute promyelocytic leukemia and vascular diseases, and it was the lowest in patients with sepsis. Correlation analysis revealed that plasma levels of FgDP correlated negatively with alpha 2-antiplasmin and positively with plasmin-alpha 2-antiplasmin complex (PAP) and a ratio of PAP to thrombin-antithrombin III complex (TAT). These findings indicate that besides fibrinolysis, fibrinogenolysis is markedly accelerated in the majority of the patients with DIC.
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PMID:Fibrinolysis and fibrinogenolysis in disseminated intravascular coagulation. 240 38

Vitronectin, also known as serum-spreading factor or S-protein, mediates cell adhesion and inhibits formation of the membrane-lytic complex of complement and the rapid inactivation of thrombin by antithrombin III in the presence of heparin. Vitronectin is normally present in plasma at a concentration of approximately 300 micrograms/mL. The investigators quantified plasma vitronectin with an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay and visualized reduced and nonreduced vitronectin by immunoblotting after separation of plasma or serum by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE). The concentration of plasma vitronectin was markedly reduced in some patients with disseminated intravascular coagulation, especially in those with liver failure; it was near normal in patients with metastatic cancer and acute leukemia. Patients with vitronectin levels less than 40% normal invariably had low fibrinogen and antithrombin III and a prolonged prothrombin time. In both normal and patient plasmas there was heterogeneity in the ratio of the 75,000- and 65,000-mol wt polypeptides of reduced vitronectin: 18% had mostly the 75,000-mol wt polypeptide, 59% had roughly equal amounts of the two polypeptides, and 22% had mostly the 65,000-mol wt polypeptide. This polymorphism is inherited and appears to be due to two alleles that are present with approximately equal frequency. The blotting patterns of vitronectin in reduced and nonreduced plasmas were largely unaltered in plasma of patients with defibrination syndrome, fibrinolysis, liver failure, sepsis, metastatic cancer, and acute leukemia. There was no evidence of fragmentation of vitronectin or formation of the disulfide-bonded complex of vitronectin and thrombin-antithrombin III that is found when blood is clotted. Thus these results corroborate in vitro observations that the liver is the major source of plasma vitronectin, suggest that vitronectin may become depleted during disseminated intravascular coagulation, and define a genetic polymorphism of vitronectin.
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PMID:Plasma vitronectin polymorphism in normal subjects and patients with disseminated intravascular coagulation. 245 67

We have shown previously that fluid phase platelet-activating factor (PAF) can enhance or "prime" polymorphonuclear (PMN) responses to subsequent stimulation with agonists such as formyl-methionine-leucine-phenylalanine (FMLP). Since thrombin induces PAF production in endothelial cells, we tested whether this thrombin-provoked endothelial PAF primes responses of marginated PMNs. Monolayers of human umbilical vein endothelial cells were exposed to either thrombin (0.5-5.0 units/ml) or buffer for up to 5 min and then PMNs were layered on top of the endothelial cells. After a further 5 min incubation, the PMNs were stimulated with a suboptimal concentration of FMLP (10(-7) M), and their superoxide production, elastase release, adhesion to endothelium, and capacity to cause endothelial cell lysis and detachment were assessed. Thrombin pretreatment significantly enhanced each of these FMLP-stimulated neutrophil responses. The extent of this enhancement correlated with both the dose and duration of thrombin treatment of endothelial cells and also the duration of PMN incubation with thrombin-exposed endothelium. Evidence that the augmentation was due to endothelial-derived PAF was obtained as follows: (1) thrombin induced [3H]acetate incorporation into endothelial PAF (assayed in lipid extracts); (2) antithrombin III conjointly inhibited this [3H]acetate uptake and prevented the priming effect of thrombin-treated endothelium on PMN responses; and (3) the PAF receptor antagonist BN52021, when preincubated with PMNs, also effectively blocked the enhancement of PMN responses. We conclude that thrombin stimulation of endothelial cells initiates a sequence of events culminating in the production of PAF--a membrane phospholipid capable of priming marginated PMNs. We suggest that this coagulation-fostered endothelial/PMN interaction may underlie a paracrine response that may potentiate PMN-mediated endothelial injury during sepsis and other thrombin-generating disorders.
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PMID:Thrombin-treated endothelium primes neutrophil functions: inhibition by platelet-activating factor receptor antagonists. 254 22

Induction of intravascular coagulation and inhibition of fibrinolysis by injection of thrombin and tranexamic acid (AMCA) in the rat gives rise to pulmonary and renal insufficiency resembling that occurring after trauma or sepsis in man. Injection of Captopril (1 mg/kg), an inhibitor of angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE), reduced both pulmonary and renal insufficiency in this rat model. The lung weights were lower and PaO2 was improved in rats given this enzyme-blocking agent. The contents of albumin in the lungs were not changed, indicating that Captopril did not influence the extravasation of protein. Renal damage as reflected by an increase in serum urea and in kidney weight was prevented by Captopril. The amount of fibrin in the kidneys was also considerably lower than in animals which received thrombin and AMCA alone. It is suggested that the effects of Captopril on the lungs may be attributable to a vasodilatory effect due to a reduction in the circulating level of Angiotension II and an increase in prostacyclin (secondary to an increase in bradykinin). Captopril may, by the same mechanism, reduce the increase in glomerular filtration that is known to occur after an injection of thrombin, thereby diminishing the aggregation of fibrin monomers in the glomeruli, with the result that less fibrin will be deposited and thus less kidney damage will be produced.
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PMID:Effects of an inhibitor of angiotensin converting enzyme (Captopril) on pulmonary and renal insufficiency due to intravascular coagulation in the rat. 267 Jul 94

Hemostatic profile (prothrombin time (PT), thrombin time (TT), kaolin cephalin clotting time (KCCT), plasma fibrinogen, serum fibrin/fibrinogen degradation products (FDP) and platelet counts) was examined in 153 neonates with birth anoxia and 86 with sepsis. Remarkable hemostatic alterations occurred in neonates with severe anoxia and sepsis, while those with moderate anoxia exhibited minimal or no change. Vitamin K administration to anoxic babies showed no improvement in the hemostatic profile after 48-72 hours. The hemostatic alterations were presumably due to incipient disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC). In spite of the marked coagulation changes, only 3 neonates with sepsis and none of the anoxic newborns presented with clinical bleeding indicating a well balanced hemostatic mechanism.
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PMID:Hemostatic changes in neonates with anoxia and sepsis. 221 Aug 33

The treatment of disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) in infants with sepsis should be instituted after multimodality therapy of pyo-inflammatory diseases taking into account the degree of hemostatic disorders. In stage I DIC (hypercoagulation one), it is necessary to reach an adequate level of the inhibitors of the thrombin and plasmin systems. In this case it is quite sufficient to use donor's cryoplasma without heparin administration. In stage II DIC (transitory one) and stage III (hypocoagulation one), it is required that the drugs possessing antithrombin and antiplasmin activity, substitution therapy with blood preparations and components as well as measures to control hemorrhagic diathesis may be used.
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PMID:[Disseminated intravascular coagulation in newborn infants with infection]. 276 53

The levels of protein C (PC) and other coagulation factors were monitored during endotoxin-induced disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) in the dog. Initial evaluation of the effectiveness of intradermal administration of bolus endotoxin quantities into the dog, demonstrated induction of DIC in the canine, without the severe side effects associated with bacterial sepsis. Quantitative determination of canine plasma protein C levels were performed using a multiple step amidolytic assay, that included a specific precipitation of the vitamin K-dependent proteins from citrated plasma, followed by thrombin activation (and neutralization) and subsequent measurement of the activated protein C (APC) by chromogen hydrolysis. This investigation demonstrated, that over a twenty-four hour interval, intradermal administration of endotoxin produces a gradual decrease in the PC activity levels, concomitant with a significant reduction in the Factor V, Factor VIII and fibrinogen levels and platelet count, and a prolongation of the Prothrombin Time and Partial Thromboplastin Time. During the first 6 hours, protein C levels fell below the pre-levels and remained significantly lower in the surviving dogs. Thus, this endotoxin-induced DIC animal model permits evaluation of various hemostatic parameters, yet diminishes the severe clinical findings associated with DIC.
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PMID:Protein C activity levels in endotoxin-induced disseminated intravascular coagulation in a dog model. 278 30

Infusion of Escherichia coli (LD100) was followed by coagulopathic and cell injury responses, cardiovascular collapse, and death in 18 to 32 hr in four out of four baboons. Infusion of AT-III in sufficient amounts to achieve AT-III levels of more than 4 units/ml of plasma before and during the infusion of E. coli reduced the intensity of the coagulopathic and cell injury response and prevented vascular collapse and death in four out of four baboons. Failure to achieve AT-III levels of more than six units/ml at T +60 min during the infusion of E. coli resulted in failure to prevent its lethal effects in three out of three baboons even though levels as high as 10 units/ml were achieved later in the course of the experiment. These studies suggest that thrombin and/or its products can contribute to the inflammatory response to E. coli and that AT-III is of potential value as a prophylactic but not as a therapeutic agent in the treatment of patients at high risk of developing gram negative sepsis.
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PMID:Antithrombin-III prevents the lethal effects of Escherichia coli infusion in baboons. 306 81

The blood coagulation system is activated regularly in severe forms of shock, polytrauma, and sepsis. Arising thrombin cleaves the fibrinopeptides A and B from fibrinogen, and it generates monomers of fibrin, which are initially kept in solution by the remaining excess fibrinogen. The effects of soluble fibrin (fibrin monomer/oligomer-fibrinogen complexes) and fibrinopeptides A and B were investigated in blood-free perfused, isolated rabbit lungs. Urea Tris buffer-dissolved fibrin monomers were injected into the pulmonary artery in the presence of circulating excess fibrinogen. In doses above 5 mg, the monomers consistently provoked a sharp rise in pulmonary artery pressure, which was followed by an elevated pressure plateau. Changing to fresh perfusate devoid of soluble fibrin did not restore the pressure to baseline, and a second administration of the soluble fibrin caused a pressor response larger than the first. Only a modest increase in lung weight (less than 2 g) was observed, and lung inflation pressure was not altered. The pressor responses were accompanied by a rapid release of thromboxane A2 and a more delayed release of prostaglandin I2 into the perfusion fluid. A significant correlation between the height of the fibrin-induced pressure rise and the amount of thromboxane release was noted. Inhibition of cyclooxygenase (indomethacin) suppressed the generation of both prostanoids, whereas inhibition of thromboxane synthetase (OKY-046 and imidazole) selectively blocked the liberation of thromboxane. All three inhibitors caused an immediate decline in pulmonary artery pressure, which had been previously elevated due to administration of soluble fibrin, and markedly reduced the pressor response evoked by a subsequent fibrin application in the same lung.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Pulmonary vasoconstrictor response to soluble fibrin in isolated lungs: possible role of thromboxane generation. 334 71

A study was initiated to determine the frequency and significance of disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) in the pediatric age group. With the aid of a scoring system, DIC was diagnosed in 48 patients in a period of slightly over one year in a pediatric referral centre with 7000 annual admissions. Sixty percent of all DIC occurred in infants under one month of life. Sixty-six percent of all DIC was associated with sepsis, usually from gram-negative infections. Seventy-nine percent of affected neonates were septic. Laboratory findings of diagnostic importance were anemia with red cell fragmentation, thrombocytopenia, elevated titres of fibrin split products, abnormal thrombin time, and low factor V activity. Mortality was 64% in all ages regardless of cause. Results of management of DIC by treatment of the underlying disease with or without anticoagulation were disappointing.
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PMID:Experience with disseminated intravascular coagulation in a children's hospital. 508 21


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