Disseminated intravascular coagulation in Adult
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Synopsis
DIC may be triggered by a variety of conditions, including trauma or burns, severe infections or sepsis, obstetrical complications, malignancies, severe snakebite reactions, and giant hemangiomas. Systemic signs and symptoms may include mental status changes, fever, dyspnea, hypotension, tachycardia, hematuria, and oliguria. Dermatologic signs include mucosal bleeding, retiform purpura, petechiae, and acral gangrene. In severe cases, fatality may occur rapidly. Complications from DIC include acute renal failure, severe hemorrhage in various locations (eg, cardiac tamponade, intracerebral hemorrhage, hemothorax), and gangrene.
DIC may be acute, chronic, or localized. Severe acute DIC is a medical emergency generally caused by trauma, malignancy, infection, or an obstetric emergency. It often presents with generalized bleeding and a shock-like picture (hypotension and tachycardia). Chronic DIC demonstrates subacute bleeding and diffuse thrombosis; its causes are often malignancies, other obstetrical complications, and autoimmune / inflammatory disorders. Many patients with low-grade chronic DIC can be managed on an outpatient basis. Localized DIC, as the name suggests, is confined to a specific body location. It is associated with giant hemangiomas (Kasabach-Merritt syndrome), aortic aneurysms, and hyperacute kidney transplant rejection.
Codes
D65 – Disseminated intravascular coagulation [defibrination syndrome]
SNOMEDCT:
67406007 – Disseminated intravascular coagulation
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Last Updated:04/02/2017