Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.4.21.5 (thrombin)
33,306 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Platelet function was studied in two cases with congenital afibrinogenemia. In these two cases there was no aggregation by ADP, while, there was increased calcium-induced platelet aggregation and decreased platelet adhesiveness to glass. Platelet aggregation was corrected in vitro, by addition of fibrinogen. It can be concluded from the above findings that the fibrinogen is an important factor for platelet aggregation by ADP and for platelet adhesion to glass surfaces, while platelet aggregation by thrombin does not need fibrinogen. The increased calcium-induced aggregation can be explained by postulating that thrombin finds no substrate to act upon except the platelets.
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PMID:Platelet function by afibrinogenemia. 103 39

Parallel examination of the ancistrone test and thrombin time may be used for express diagnosis of the DIC syndrome. The heparin test enables in heparin-treated patients to distinguish real afibrinogenemia from false when the blood plasma retains fibrinogen blocked and noncoagulable with thrombin.
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PMID:[The importance of the enzyme preparation ancistron-N in the diagnosis of disseminated intravascular coagulation]. 227 70

A defibrination syndrome developed in two men (aged 51, and 29 years old) within two hours of having been bitten by vipers Echis carinatus and Agkistrodon halys, respectively. In both the syndrome was characterized by afibrinogenemia with prolongation of the thrombin time, presence of fibrin monomers and split products of fibrinogen. Haemorrhagic signs included oral mucosa bleeding and macrohematuria. Specific serum was administered 9 and 16 hours, respectively, after the bite and achieved normalization of all clotting values within 48 hours.
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PMID:[Defibrination syndrome after snake bites]. 247 8

Glu-plasminogen, the native form of plasminogen, interacts in a specific and saturable manner with unstimulated human platelets, and the binding is enhanced fivefold by thrombin stimulation (Miles and Plow, 1985. J. Biol. Chem. 260:4303). This study characterizes the nature of the Glu-plasminogen binding sites by analyzing platelets deficient in selected proteins and functions. Platelets from patients with afibrinogenemia, Gray platelet syndrome, and the Cam Variant of thrombasthenia, a form of thrombasthenia with near normal levels of glycoprotein IIb/IIIa (GPIIb/IIIa), showed minimal augmentation of plasminogen binding to thrombin-stimulated platelets but normal binding to unstimulated platelets. This selective deficiency indicates that two distinct mechanisms are involved in the interaction of plasminogen with platelets. These abnormal platelets share a deficiency in fibrinogen. Surface expression of platelet fibrinogen, however, was not sufficient for enhanced plasminogen binding to stimulated platelets, and experiments with alpha-thrombin and gamma-thrombin indicated that fibrin formation on the platelet surface is necessary for the augmented plasminogen binding. Unstimulated and stimulated thrombasthenic platelets deficient in GPIIb/IIIa bound markedly reduced levels of plasminogen, which suggests a role for GPIIb/IIIa in plasminogen binding to unstimulated platelets. Treatment of platelets to dissociate the heterodimeric complex of GPIIb/IIIa did not significantly perturb plasminogen binding to unstimulated platelets, but the complex may be necessary for thrombin-stimulated plasminogen binding via its interaction with platelet fibrin.
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PMID:Plasminogen interacts with human platelets through two distinct mechanisms. 308 85

Blood coagulation studies carried out on 78 patients up to 30 h after they were bitten by Bothrops jararaca snakes demonstrated clotting defects in 37 patients which included afibrinogenemia, reduced levels of prothrombin, of factors V and VIII, thrombocytopenia and activation of the fibrinolytic system. Factor IX and X levels were within normal range for all patients. These in vitro data suggest that the disseminated intravascular clotting observed in vivo following envenomation may be triggered by the intravascular release of patient thrombin by snake venom enzymes.
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PMID:Alterations of the blood coagulation system after accidental human inoculation by Bothrops jararaca venom. 310 94

The effects of fibrin microembolism were examined using an infusion of a prothrombin activator (Echis carinatus venom, ECV; 30 min, 0.5 NIH thrombin equivalent units/kg) in acute mongrel dogs prepared with a pulmonary lymph cannula (n = 6, 12.3-21.5 kg). Lymph flow increased approximately 2.5-fold after 1-1.5 hr of elevated left atrial pressure (Pla = 20 cm H2O; 26 +/- 7 to 63 +/- 16 microliter/min, P less than 0.01) and the plasma to lymph protein concentration ratio (CP/CL) declined from 0.66 +/- .04 to 0.54 +/- .16 (P less than 0.01, x +/- SE). After Pla was reduced to control levels, the initiation of fibrin microembolism was associated with an approximate 2.7-fold elevation of lymph flow (62 +/- 8 microliters/min, P less than 0.01) and the CP/CL was not changed (0.56 +/- 0.04, P = ns). When Pla was increased following microembolism, lymph flow more than doubled to 117 +/- 24 microliter/min (P less than 0.01) and the CP/CL remained unaltered (0.56 +/- 0.03, P = ns). These changes were associated with afibrinogenemia and the appearance of fibrin degradation products (FDP) in plasma (150 +/- 50 micrograms/ml) and lymph (80 micrograms/ml) in three of the animals tested. No consistent pattern was seen in the CL/CP of separate endogenous plasma proteins after each intervention. These data support the view that pulmonary fibrin microembolism without inhibition of the fibrinolytic system was associated with an early increased pulmonary microvascular permeability to protein. In a separate group of similarly prepared animals (n = 8, 13-21.5 kg) without a lymph catheter, scanning electron microscopic observations showed branching fibrin microemboli to partially occlude some pulmonary arterioles. Mixed thrombus formations in larger precapillary blood vessels were also seen. Ultrastructural observations revealed the deposition of fibrin strands (periodicity = 220-230 A) within the pulmonary capillaries. Some of these deposits were overlaid by lamellar pseudopodia from endothelial cells and the fibrin appeared to be within these cells. Although plasmalemmal vesicles seemed to be more numerous in the endothelial cells with adjacent fibrin deposits, no gaps or breaks were seen in the densely stained interendothelial cell junctions and/or the endothelial cell membrane of the affected lung capillaries. Activated neutrophils and platelets were more numerous in the pulmonary capillaries following EVC. These data suggest that the presence of FDP and/or fibrin deposits within the pulmonary microvasculature may influence the early functional integrity of pulmonary endothelial cells at sites of fibrin accumulation.
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PMID:Pulmonary fibrin deposition and increased microvascular permeability to protein following fibrin microembolism in dogs: a structure-function relationship. 330 21

Blood interaction with the subendothelium of rabbit aorta was investigated in an annular perfusion chamber using patients with von Willebrand's disease, hemophilia, and afibrinogenemia. The vessels were exposed to nonanticoagulated blood for a range of flow conditions (wall shear rates of 650-3,300 s-1) and exposure times (1.5-10 min). The resultant platelet and fibrin interaction was quantified by the use of several morphometric techniques, one of which was developed to measure more precisely the dimensions (height and volume) of platelet thrombi attached to the subendothelium. A major finding was that under flow conditions in which little or no defect in platelet adhesion was observed in von Willebrand's disease, platelet thrombus height and volume in this disorder were significantly reduced as compared with normal controls or patients with hemophilia. Thus, Factor VIII/von Willebrand factor (VIII/VWF) may mediate not only the adhesion of platelets to subendothelium but also platelet-platelet attachments necessary for normal thrombus development. The level of Factor VIII:coagulant activity (VIII: C) was also observed to influence the resultant thrombus height and volume deposited on subendothelium, presumably through the generation of thrombin or some other procoagulant factor preceding fibrin formation, since normal values of thrombus dimensions were always observed in a patient with a fibrinogen deficiency. The influence of VIII:C became greater as shear rate was reduced, whereas as shear rate was increased, VIII/VWF was more dominant in determining the resultant platelet deposition on subendothelium. Thus, the deficiencies of VIII:C and VIII/VWF in hemophilia and von Willebrand's disease can lead to various abnormalities in platelet and fibrin association with subendothelium. The importance of a particular deficiency will depend strongly on the local blood flow conditions.
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PMID:Platelet interaction with rabbit subendothelium in von Willebrand's disease: altered thrombus formation distinct from defective platelet adhesion. 633 2

Platelets from patients with several bleeding disorders (congenital afibrinogenemia, Glanzmann's thrombasthenia, gray platelet syndrome, and Hermansky-Pudlak syndrome) were evaluated for both platelet-bound and platelet-free hemagglutination activities. Thrombin and A23187 activated afibrinogenemic, Hermansky-Pudlak, and thrombasthenic platelets had normal platelet-bound hemagglutination activity. Gray platelets activated by the same agents had deficient platelet-bound hemagglutination activity. In contrast, thrombin-activated afibrinogenemic, gray, and thrombasthenic platelets lacked platelet-free hemagglutination activity. Only thrombin-activated Hermansky-Pudlak platelets had a normal level of platelet-free hemagglutination activity. On the basis of these results and the distinguishing characteristics of the defective platelets, it is concluded that the alpha-granules are the origin of the enhanced hemagglutination activity. Furthermore, it is suggested that the insufficiency of the platelet-bound agglutinin may be the cause of the inability of gray platelets to aggregate normally in response to thrombin.
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PMID:The endogenous lectin of human platelets is an alpha-granule component. 723 87

Inhibition of thrombin formation in flowing native blood reduces thrombus formation on subendothelium, dacron, or collagen fibrils at arterial wall shear rates of 450 to 650 s-1. In the present study, we have investigated the role of low levels of factor VII (FVII) in thrombus formation on collagen fibrils at arterial wall shear rates of 650 s-1 (coronary arteries), 2,600 s-1 (mildly stenosed arteries), and 10,510 s-1 (severely stenosed arteries) in parallel-plate perfusion chambers. In the perfusion chamber with the highest wall shear rate, thrombus formation took place at the apex of an eccentric stenosis, which reduced the cross-sectional area of the blood flow channel by 80%, thus simulating thrombus formation at an atherosclerotic plaque rupture. Native blood from 21 healthy volunteers and 12 homozygous FVII-deficient patients was drawn by a pump directly from an antecubital vein over a surface of fibrillar collagen positioned in the respective perfusion chambers. The patients had FVII coagulant activities ranging from 1.3% to 4.5% and FVII antigen levels of 16% to 23% of normal. Immunoaffinity purification of the patients' FVII followed by electrophoresis (sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis [SDS-PAGE]) and immunoblotting showed a protein with similar molecular mass as normal FVII. In the perfusion studies, a reduction in thrombus volume of 54% of normal (P < .007) at 10,510 s-1 was observed. The deposition of fibrin on the thrombogenic surface and the plasma level of fibrinopeptide A (FPA) in blood samples collected distal to the perfusion chamber were concomitantly reduced (P < .002 and P < .04, respectively). The plasma FPA level was also reduced at 2,600 s-1 (P < .04), but not at 650 s-1. However, at the lower shear conditions, the thrombus volume and the fibrin deposition were within the ranges observed in normal blood. The platelet-collagen adhesion was not affected at any of the three shear conditions. Thus, low plasma levels of FVII result in significantly less formation of thrombin and fibrin in and around growing platelet masses at high shear condition. This may weaken the thrombus stability and reduce platelet recruitment, thereby lowering thrombus volume. In support of this theory, one patient with afibrinogenemia had an 83% reduction in thrombus volume at this high shear condition.
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PMID:Reduced thrombus formation in native blood of homozygous factor VII-deficient patients at high arterial wall shear rate. 794 91

We describe a patient with congenital afibrinogenemia who showed elevated prothrombin activation fragments (F1 + 2) indicating increased thrombin formation. This finding was unexpected since it has hitherto been thought that patients with congenital hypo- or afibrinogenemia have no evidence of increased utilization or accelerated consumption of coagulation factors. No other possible reasons for the elevation of F 1 + 2 were found. Upon fibrinogen substitution F1 + 2 decreased and were again increasing when fibrinogen concentration in plasma fell to very low levels. These findings raise the question of whether increased thrombin formation should be understood as a compensatory mechanism in congenital afibrinogenemia.
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PMID:Increased prothrombin activation in a patient with congenital afibrinogenemia is reversible by fibrinogen substitution. 808 75


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