·
A grave blood
coagulation disorder occurs as a complication of conditions that accelerate
clotting wherein activation of thrombin & fibrinolytic system results in
simultaneous bleeding & thrombosis.
·
Caused by
infections, obstetric complications, neoplastic disease, tissue necrosis,
cardiac arrest, stroke, incompatible blood transfusion, etc.
Signs & Symptoms:
ü Petechiae
ü Ecchymosis
ü Dyspnea
ü Prolonged bleeding after venipuncture
ü Joint pain
ü Hemorrhage
ü Purpura
ü Oliguria
ü Anxiety
ü Restlessness
Screening &
Diagnosis:
·
Hematology - ↓platelets,
RBC, fibrinogen, factor assay (II,V,VII), ↑fibrin split products, thrombin, PT,
PTT, (+) protamine sulfate test
·
ABG analysis –
metabolic acidosis
·
D-dimer test –
result (+) ; specific test for DIC
Treatment:
·
Medications
o
Anticoagulants: heparin,
antithrombin III (ATnativ®, Thrombate® III)
·
Blood transfusion
– platelets, PRBC, FFP, whole blood, volume expanders, cryoprecipitates.
·
Bed rest
·
Oxygen therapy
·
IV therapy : hydration, electrolyte replacement,
heparin lock
·
Hemodialysis
Complications:
·
Acute renal
failure
·
Shock
·
CVA
·
Convulsions
·
Hemorrhage
·
Coma
Nursing
Interventions:
·
Administer
prescribed medications & IV fluids.
·
Monitor
cardiovascular, respiratory, & fluid balance.
·
Avoid
intramuscular injections, enemas, rectal temperatures & straight razors.
·
Check all IV &
venipuncture sites frequently for bleeding.
·
Enforce complete
bed rest during bleeding episodes.
·
Monitor for
transfusion reactions.
·
Monitor results of
blood studies & report any signs of complications.
·
Maintain seizure
precautions.
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