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==References==
==References==
{{Reflist|2}}
{{Reflist|2}}
Common Causes of DIC
* Infections:
** [[Sepsis]], particularly with [[gram-negative bacteria]]
** Viral
** [[Malaria]]
** [[Rickettsial]]
* Obstetric complications (most common cause), with chemicals from the [[uterus]] being released into the blood. These include:
** [[Amniotic fluid embolism]]
** [[Eclampsia]]
** ''[[Abruptio placentae]]''
** [[Placenta praevia]]
** intra-uterine death
* Tissue trauma such as burns, accidents, surgery, heat stroke or [[Shock (medical)|shock]].
* [[Liver]] disease:
** [[Cirrhosis]]
** Acute hepatic [[necrosis]]
* Incompatible blood [[transfusion reaction]]s or massive [[blood transfusion]] (when more than the total circulatory volume is tranfused)
* [[Graft-versus-host disease]]
* Cancers, particularly of the following types, and especially when [[metastatic]]:
** [[Stomach cancer]]
** [[Colorectal cancer]]
** [[Pancreatic cancer]]
** [[Mucin]]-secreting [[adenocarcinoma]]
** [[Acute promyelocytic leukemia]]
* [[Viral hemorrhagic fever]]s bring about their frank effects, paradoxically, by causing DIC.
* Envenomation by some [[species]] of [[venomous snake]]s, such as those belonging to the [[genus]] ''[[Echis]]'' (saw-scaled vipers).

Revision as of 16:37, 6 February 2014

Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]; Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief: Rim Halaby, M.D. [2]

Overview

Sepsis is a life threatening condition.[1][2]

Title

References

  1. XYZ, NEJM, 2014
  2. Remick DG (2007). "Pathophysiology of sepsis". Am J Pathol. 170 (5): 1435–44. doi:10.2353/ajpath.2007.060872. PMC 1854939. PMID 17456750.


Common Causes of DIC