1.Warfarin-Induced Penile Necrosis in a Patient with Heparin-Induced Thrombocytopenia.
In Ho CHANG ; Moon Soo HA ; Byung Hoon CHI ; Yong Wook KOWN ; Sang Jae LEE
Journal of Korean Medical Science 2010;25(9):1390-1393
A 56-yr-old man with lung adenocarcinoma presented with subsegmental pulmonary thrombosis. Platelet count on presentation was 531x10(9)/L. The patient was anticoagulated with subcutaneous low molecular weight heparin (LMWH). Next day, oral anticoagulation was initiated with 5 mg of warfarin once daily with LMWH and LMWH was discontinued at third hospital day. On the third day of oral anticoagulation therapy, he complained of left leg swelling and prolonged painful penile erection of 24 hr-duration. His platelet count reached a nadir 164x10(9)/L at that time, and the patient had a deficiency of protein C and S, with an activity level of 16% and 20% of normal value. Warfarin was stopped and he underwent penile aspiration. The next day, left leg edema and penile erection was disappeared, but penile and glans penis necrosis was started. This case illustrates that processes underlying heparin-induced thrombocytopenia (HIT) may also underlie warfarin-induced skin necrosis.
Adenocarcinoma/complications/diagnosis
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Anticoagulants/*adverse effects
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Heparin/*adverse effects
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Humans
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Lung Neoplasms/complications/diagnosis
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Male
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Middle Aged
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Necrosis
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Penile Erection/drug effects
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Penis/*pathology
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Platelet Count
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Protein C/analysis
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Protein S/analysis
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Pulmonary Artery
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Thrombocytopenia/*chemically induced
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Thrombosis/complications/diagnosis/drug therapy
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Warfarin/*adverse effects
2.Toxicokinetics of paraquat in Korean patients with acute poisoning.
Hak Jae KIM ; Hyung Ki KIM ; Hwayoung LEE ; Jun Seok BAE ; Jun Tack KOWN ; Hyo Wook GIL ; Sae Yong HONG
The Korean Journal of Physiology and Pharmacology 2016;20(1):35-39
To conduct a kinetic study of paraquat (PQ), we investigated 9 patients with acute PQ intoxication. All of them ingested more than 20 ml of undiluted PQ herbicide to commit suicide and arrived at our hospital early, not later than 7 h after PQ ingestion. The urine dithionite test for PQ in all of the nine patients was strongly positive at emergency room. Blood samples were obtained every 30 min for the first 2~3 h and then every 1 or 2 h, as long as the clinical progression was stable among the patients for 30 h after PQ ingestion. The area under the plasma concentration-time curve (AUCinf), which was extrapolated to infinity, was calculated using the trapezoidal rule. Toxicokinetic parameters, such as the terminal elimination half-life, apparent oral clearance, and apparent volume of distribution (Vd/F) were calculated. The maximum PQ concentration (Cmax) and the time to reach maximum PQ concentration (Tmax) were also obtained. Plasma PQ concentrations in nine patients were well described by a bi-exponential curve with a mean terminal elimination half-life of 13.1+/-6.8 h. Cmax and AUCinf were 20.8+/-25.7 mg/l and 172.5+/-160.3 h.mg/l, respectively. Apparent volume of distribution and apparent oral clearance were 50.9+/-61.3 l/kg and 173.4+/-111.2 l/h, respectively. There were a significant correlation (r =0.84; p<0.05) between the PQ amount ingested and Cmax. AUCinf also showed a significant correlation (r =0.83; p<0.05) with the PQ amount ingested. These correlations provide evidence that PQ has dose-linear toxicokinetic characteristics.
Dithionite
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Eating
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Emergency Service, Hospital
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Half-Life
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Humans
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Paraquat*
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Pharmacokinetics*
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Plasma
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Poisoning*
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Suicide