Acute DIC
The common causes of acute disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) include:
- infection:
- Gram negative bacteraemia will produce some DIC in 10-20% of patients
- Gram positive sepsis is a less common cause of DIC
- systemic fungal infection, malaria, viral haemorrhagic fevers, herpes and influenza are rare causes of DIC
- obstetric catastrophes:
- abruptio placentae with amniotic fluid embolism releases a tissue factor into the maternal circulation
- evacuation of the uterus usually results in prompt termination of the DIC
- endothelial damage:
- burns, sunstroke, electric shocks etc
- burns, sunstroke, electric shocks etc
- incompatible blood transfusion:
- usually requires ABO incompatibility
- DIC results from endothelial damaged by complement and not from lysed red cells
- hepatic disease:
- acute hepatic necrosis
- acute fatty liver of pregnancy
- LeVeen shunt insertion in a patient with ascites
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