Thromb Haemostasis
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Clinical Trial Controlled Clinical Trial
Outcome of disseminated intravascular coagulation in relation to the score when treatment was begun. Mie DIC Study Group.
We examined 395 patients with disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) divided into two groups: non-leukemic and leukemic. In 58% of the patients as a whole, treatment of DIC resulted in complete or partial remission, while exacerbation and death occurred in 31%. The efficacy of DIC treatment in the non-leukemic group was less than that in the leukemic group, indicating that the outcome of DIC depended, in part, on the underlying disease. ⋯ The outcome was poorer with increasing DIC score, suggesting that early diagnosis and early treatment are important. On examining the relationship between outcome and hemostatic indicators, we found that the PT ratio and the levels of antithrombin, plasminogen, PPIC, the PPIC/TAT ratio, and thrombomodulin were related to outcome, suggesting that very high consumption of blood coagulation factors, liver dysfunction, hypofibrinolysis, or organ failure caused a poor outcome. Although the outcome in DIC patients may not depend substantially on plasma levels of TAT and fibrin-D-dimer, we can use these indicators to treat DIC patients at an early stage.
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Case Reports
Effect of fibrinogen substitution in afibrinogenemia on hemorheology and platelet function.
Fibrinogen substitution can correct bleeding in afibrinogenemia. We assessed the effect of fibrinogen substitution in a patient lacking immunoreactive fibrinogen. Fibrinogen and thrombin time were not measurable before, but became detectable within 30 min after substitution, parallelled by an increase in ADP-induced platelet aggregation from < 10% to 32%. ⋯ Immunoelectron microscopy revealed normal GPIIb/IIIa receptor expression, both before and after substitution. Dynamic and kinematic viscosity of plasma and whole blood remained below the 99.9% confidence border of a healthy control group. In afibrinogenemia fibrinogen levels as low as 10% of normal concentration sufficed to normalize coagulation, platelet adhesion, and, partially, spreading.