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

In 40 patients with non-metastasising (n = 31) and metastasising (n = 9) renal cell carcinoma, evidence of Stauffer's syndrome (increase in alkaline serum phosphatase and prolongation of prothrombin time) was found in 18 patients. Prolongation of prothrombin time was not due to depletion of vitamin K-dependent coagulation factors or manifest fibrinolysis, but due to the presence of circulating fibrinogen fibrinmonomer-FDP complexes. Ethanol gelation test was found to be positive in 28/40 subjects and soluble fibrin monomer complexes were increased in 38/40 patients. The resulting disturbance of fibrinogen-fibrin conversion was reflected by an increase in thrombin coagulase time and reptilase time. These findings suggests a state of latent compensated intravascular coagulation (presumably triggered within the vascular tumor). For diagnostic purposes the most sensitive indicator is thrombin coagulase time. Thrombin coagulase time normalised after tumor resection and was positive in patients with recurrent metastases. The increase in alkaline serum phosphatase was due to an increase in the hepatic isoenzyme. Such an increase was much more common than the elevation of total alkaline serum phosphatase. Regan's isoenzyme was only found in 1 subject. In parallel, gamma-GT was elevated in 24 patients. The study shows that Stauffer's syndrome occurs more frequently than commonly assumed when thrombin coagulase time, gamma-GT and the hepatic isoenzyme of alkaline serum phosphatase are determined in patients with renal cell carcinoma. DIC and low grade fibrinolysis may account for the coagulation abnormalities of the syndrome.
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PMID:Stauffer's syndrome in renal cell carcinoma evidence for intravascular coagulation. 736 22

In 124 patients with various types of malignancy, fpA and delta fpA were measured. In 35 of these patients the effect of heparin injection on fpA and delta fpA was studied. All patients were ambulant without clinical signs of venous thromboembolism or DIC and had not received cytostatic, anticoagulant, or radiotherapy recently. In about 75% of these patients, fpA was elevated, whereas in the blood of one third of the patients, both elevated fpA levels and accelerated delta fpA were detected. Eight of the 45 patients with accelerated delta fpA (and elevated fpA) presented laboratory signs of low-grade DIC. In the patients taken at random for heparin administration, delta fpA normalized upon heparin injection, whereas in the majority of patients, irrespective of the fpA-generation rate, fpA levels were not affected by "adequate" heparinization. These results indicate that (1) about 30% of the (selected) patients admitted to our cancer clinic present with evidence of intravascular thrombin activity and (2) in 70% of these patients fpA is generated, at least in part, at a site not accessible to heparin. In addition 95% of patients with active metastatic disease showed an elevated fpA, whereas 90% of cancer patients in remission and 80% of patients without metastasis had a normal fpA, indicating that fpA can potentially be used to estimate the spread and the activity of the malignant process.
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PMID:Significance of plasma fibrinopeptide A (fpA) in patients with malignancy. 739 57

In 16 patients admitted in shock, heparin prophylaxis for DIC was carried out. The effect of heparin was monitored by a series of coagulation tests. A distinct relation was found between the effect of heparin on the aPTT and on the thrombin clotting time and the activity of antithrombin III. Even a comparatively slight diminution of this activity resulted in a considerable decrease of the heparin effect on coagulation. Since this effect is of primary importance for the efficacy of prophylaxis of DIC, regular assays of antithrombin III are proposed in shock patients receiving heparin.
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PMID:[Prophylaxis of consumption coagulopathy in shock. Dependence of the effect of heparin on the activity of antithrombin III (author's transl)]. 745 2

We examined the anticoagulant activity of two major molecules of soluble thrombomodulin purified from human urine. The apparent molecular weights of these urinary thrombomodulins (UTMs) were 72,000 and 79,000, respectively. Both UTMs showed more potent cofactor activity for protein C activation [specific activity > 5,000 thrombomodulin units (TMU)/mg] than human placental thrombomodulin (2,180 TMU/mg) and rabbit lung thrombomodulin (1,980 TMU/mg). The UTMs prolonged thrombin-induced fibrinogen clotting time (> 1 TMU /ml), APTT (> 5 TMU/ml), TT (> 5 TMU/ml) and PT (> 40 TMU/ ml) in a dose-dependent fashion. These effects appeared in the concentration range of soluble thrombomodulins present in human plasma and urine. In the rat DIC model induced by thromboplastin, administration of UTMs by infusion (300-3,000 TMU/kg) restored the hematological abnormalities derived from DIC in a dose-dependent fashion. These results demonstrate that UTMs exhibit potent anticoagulant and antithrombotic activities, and could play a physiologically important role in microcirculation.
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PMID:Soluble thrombomodulin purified from human urine exhibits a potent anticoagulant effect in vitro and in vivo. 748 7

The blood coagulation and fibrinolysis of 33 patients with compensated liver cirrhosis and 31 patients with hepatocellular carcinoma were examined using several markers, namely thrombin-antithrombin III complex (TAT), plasmin-alpha 2 plasmin inhibitor complex (PIC), antithrombin-III (AT-III) and prothrombin time, and the relationship between these markers, endotoxemia, and TNF-alpha was examined. These patients had no complications due to hepatic failure, such as infections, encephalopathy, ascites, G-I bleeding and clinical DIC. PIC was not elevated, but TAT tended to be elevated in LC and significantly elevated in HCC. AT-III was decreased in LC and HCC, and the blood endotoxin was partly positive in LC and HCC, but was not correlated with AT-III or PT. The TAT level in the blood-endotoxin-positive patients measured by endospecy methods was higher than that in the negative patients, and was significantly correlated with the blood endotoxin level in the LC and HCC patients (r = 0.57, r = 0.88, p < 0.01). No relationship was observed between TNF-alpha and blood endotoxin. In conclusion, (1) blood coagulability was activated already in compensated LC and HCC, but was not connected with fibrinolysis, (2) the activation of coagulability was closely related with endotoxemia, and (3) TNF-alpha was not correlated with blood endotoxin or TAT.
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PMID:[Blood coagulation and fibrinolysis in relation to endotoxemia in liver cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma]. 756 21

Endotoxin(lipopolysaccharide = LPS), cell wall component of gram-negative bacteria, activates monocytes and macrophages to release cytokines, reactive nitrogen intermediates (RNI), and to generate tissue factor(TF) which initiate coagulation. We have purified 7kDa and 18kDa cationic antibacterial proteins (CAP-7 and CAP-18) with LPS-binding and LPS-neutralizing activities from rabbit granulocytes using as an assay the agglutination of erythrocytes coated with Re-LPS. From protein sequencing, CAP-7 was identified as the C-terminal 37 amino acid fragment of CAP-18. Synthetic peptide #197 (identical sequence to CAP-7, Gly1-Try37) and #36-1 (a truncation of CAP consisting of 32 amino acid residues, Gly1-Ala32) showed LPS-binding activity. Each peptide inhibited LPS-induced tissue factor(TF) generation by murine peritoneal macrophages, even added 1-3 hours after stimulation of cells with LPS. C57BL/6 mice treated with #197 were significantly protected from lethal LPS challenge. Peptide #36 also blocked the LPS-induced lethality. These peptides had antibacterial activity to gram-negative bacteria, such as E.coli, S.typhimurium, K.pneumonia, Ps.aeruginosa and also to gram-positive S.aureus (Methicillin sensitive and resistant strains). Both peptides inhibited TF- and Xa-induced plasma clotting. Using synthetic chromotogenic substrates, both CAP7 peptides blocked the coagulation cascade at two sites, activation of factor X to Xa and conversion of Factor II (prothrombin) to factor IIa (thrombin). In vivo treatment of peptide #197 prevented acute lethality in mice injected with tissue factor (rabbit brain thromboplastin). Two other peptides, #32(Gly1-Phe9) and #50(Ile13-Typ37) failed to demonstrate LPS-binding, LPS-neutralizing, antibacterial and anticoagulant activities. The active peptides but not the inactive peptide maintain a putative heparin binding domain at their N-termini. This heparin binding domain is participate in the LPS-binding, LPS neutralizing, antibacterial and anticoagulant activities of CAP7. These active peptides may have a therapeutic potential for treatment for DIC due to sepsis and endotoxin shock.
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PMID:Endotoxin-binding synthetic peptides with endotoxin-neutralizing, antibacterial and anticoagulant activities. 783 55

Disturbed liver parenchymal cell function adversely impacts on the hemostasis system, the extent of which correlates with the degree of liver disease. Because liver parenchymal cells synthesize most factors of the clotting and the fibrinolytic systems, levels of these procoagulant and anticoagulant as well as profibrinolytic and antifibrinolytic factors will decrease in plasma. These changes may be minor in patients with mild liver disease but are severe in patients with cirrhosis. Thrombocytopenia and thrombocytopathy usually complicate the clinical presentation, and systemic activation of the fibrinolytic system is always seen in cirrhotic individuals. Whether this fibrinolytic activation is primary or secondary in response to DIC is controversial. Some of the laboratory findings in DIC may be a reflection of decreased hepatic clearance of activation products by the reticuloendothelial system of the diseased liver. In patients with vitamin K deficiency or in those receiving oral anticoagulants, only the vitamin K-dependent procoagulants and anticoagulants are altered; all other parameters remain in the normal range. Laboratory changes associated with various surgical interventions involving the liver depend on the underlying pathology. Severe hemorrhages are encountered during orthotopic liver transplantation. During the anhepatic phase and during the reperfusion phase, there is a major activation of the fibrinolytic system. It is unclear whether this fibrinolytic response is primary or secondary. The use of antifibrinolytic agents has markedly reduced the clinical bleeding and, thus, the requirement for blood and blood products. Bleeding associated with partial liver resection is usually mechanical in nature, but peritoneovenous shunt operations can result in DIC. Ascites fluid is the trigger. The injection of thrombin containing sclerosants can also activate the hemostasis system in vivo, although, generally, no clinically detectable adverse reactions are noted.
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PMID:Coagulopathies of liver disease. 787 70

Monocytes/macrophages and endothelial cells express tissue factor (TF), an initiator for blood clotting pathway, following their activation accompanied by immune response and/or inflammation. This TF expression results in thrombin generation and fibrin formation around these cells and possibly participates in host-defense mechanism. TF expression by these cells is also a risk-factor to vascular diseases including arteriosclerosis and thrombosis. In cancer and leukemia patients elevation of their plasma TF level associated with DIC and related coagulation disorders.
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PMID:[Current scopes on tissue factor: its physiological function and relationship with coagulation diseases]. 802 93

Efficacy and safety of i.v. dermatan sulphate (DS) and heparin (H) in controlling laboratory alterations due to DIC were compared in 10 patients with acute leukaemia, in a prospective, randomised pilot study. The time courses of the coagulation and fibrinolysis markers for DIC were similar in the two treatment groups except for activated partial thromboplastin time and thrombin time, which were prolonged in the H but not in the DS group. Blood product support tended to be greater in the H than in the DS group. DS appears to be as effective as H in controlling thrombin production during leukaemic cytolysis and may represent a safer alternative to H in the management of DIC in acute leukaemia.
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PMID:Dermatan sulphate for the treatment of disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) in acute leukemia: a randomised, heparin-controlled pilot study. 802 9

Consumptive coagulation disorders are frequently observed in critically ill patients secondary to other underlying diseases. Initial hypercoagulability leads to subsequent hypocoagulability due to consumption of procoagulant proteins, inhibitors, and platelets. This process evolves in three distinct phases: an initial increase in coagulation activity is characterised by the activation of coagulation factors and platelets without any clinical symptoms of a haemorrhagic diathesis. The ongoing process of activation and accelerated consumption of coagulation factors and inhibitors causes a critical reduction in the haemostatic potential. The time of onset of the clinical symptoms of bleeding depends on the patient's underlying disease and its pharmacological management. Coagulation processes that are restricted locally under normal conditions become disseminated when the inhibitory potential--mainly represented by antithrombin III (AT III)--is exhausted. Therefore, thrombin formation occurs, especially in the microcirculation, where fibrin clot deposition begins to cause inhomogeneities of blood flow and thus to reduce oxygen delivery to the tissues. Hypocoagulability, reactive hyperfibrinolysis, and diffuse bleeding lead to an irreversible systemic breakdown of haemostatic mechanisms (disseminated intravascular coagulation, DIC). The laboratory diagnosis of accelerated consumption is based on the course of global coagulation tests (e.g., prothrombin time, activated partial thromboplastin time, platelet count) and more sensitive ("dynamic") activation parameters such as prothrombin fragment F1 + 2, thrombin-AT III complex, fibrin monomers, or d-dimer. Measurements of plasminogen, tissue plasminogen activator, plasminogen activator inhibitor 1, and alpha 2-antiplasmin-plasmin complex provide information on fibrinolytic turnover.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Diagnosis and therapy of disseminated intravascular coagulation]. 804 68


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