DSpace
 

Rubicon Research Repository >
Rubicon Foundation Archive >
UHMS Meeting Abstracts >

Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://archive.rubicon-foundation.org/4830

Title: AN AUTOPSY CASE OF ACUTE DECOMPRESSION SICKNESS - ROLE OF INCREASED COAGULABILITY IN DECOMPRESSION SICKNESS OF PATHOLOGICAL BASES.
Authors: Kitano, M
Keywords: decompression
sickness
increase
coagulability
edema
rabbit
animal
femur
marrow
Issue Date: 1979
Publisher: Undersea and Hyperbaric Medical Society, Inc.
Citation: Undersea Biomedical Research, Vol. 6, No. 1 Supplement, March 1979
Abstract: Decompression sickness is still popular among occupational diseases in Japan. We have previously suggested a definite importance of increased coagulability on the pathogenesis in decompression sickness. This report presents autopsy findings of a 28 year-old male case of acute decompression sickness and further pathophysiological evidences. In the autopsy case, the spinal cord showed early stage of edematous necrosis accompanied by extensive intravascular coagulation with bubble and fat embolism in the epidural venous plexus. Platelet aggregation and thrombus formation around bubbles were also found in the bone marrow tissue of femur in which extensive necrotic processes developed. The lungs revealed severe congestion, edema and intraalveolar hemorrhage in association with extensive fat embolism. Similar lesions were reproduced in the experimental rabbits. Application of FITC-conjugated anti-rabbit-fibrinogen sheep-IgG documented accumulation of fibrinogen in the vessels of the lung and the bone marrow tissue of femur. Therefore it might be reasonable to consider that the circulatory disturbance due to increased coagulability plays an important role on the pathogenesis of decompression sickness.
URI: http://archive.rubicon-foundation.org/4830
Appears in Collections:Undesignated Accident and Fatality Reports
UHMS Meeting Abstracts

Files in This Item:

File Description SizeFormat
abstract.txt0KbTextView/Open

All items in DSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved.

 

  Copyright © 2004-2006 Rubicon Foundation, Inc. - Feedback