Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.4.21.6 (thromboplastin)
13,278 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Factor VII levels have been measured in 100 patients with liver disease following parenteral vitamin K1 therapy. There was good agreement between specific factor VII measurements and the one-stage prothrombin time apart from six patients with compensated cirrhosis in whom the prothrombin time was prolonged despite the presence of normal factor VII levels. A mean activity of 58% was found in patients with cirrhosis. Cirrhotic patients with features of hepatic decompensation had a significantly lower mean level of activity (40%) than the "contrast" patients with surgical obstruction of the major bile ducts (93%). Patients with chronic active liver disease had moderate depression of factor VII levels and those with non-cirrhotic liver damage had mean activities similar to the contrast group. Factor VII levels could not be correlated with BSP retention but there was a correlation with serum albumin concentration. It is concluded that the prothrombin time using Quick test with a standardized thromboplastin showing good sensitivity to factor VII, eg, the Manchester reagent (BCT), provides a reliable index of coagulability in chronic liver disease, and specific factor VII assays are not indicated.
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PMID:Factor VII as a marker of hepatocellular synthetic function in liver disease. 100 40

The protein and phospholipid components of tissue thromboplastin have been isolated and their interactions with factor VII and factor Xa have been studied by gel filtration, centrifugation and heat inactivation. As expected, the phospholipid fraction bound both factors in the presence of Ca2+. No evidence for an interaction of apoprotein III with factor VII or Xa was obtained.
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PMID:The interaction of the protein and phospholipid components of tissue thromboplastin (factor III) with the factors VII and X. 112 48

The physiological mechanism to prevent and control abnormal bleeding is dependent on three vitamins (C, K, and Q). Two of these are unequivocally established as essential for hemostasis while the existence of the third (Q) is supported by experimental evidence and by clinical and therapeutic observations (Quick 1972; Quick 1974). The interrelationship of these three vitamins has remained moot except for clue observations. Both vitamins C and K have a key structure in their molecules which supplies a redox mechanism, ascorbic acid and 2-methyl, 1,4-naphthoquinone, respectively. Both vitamins are concerned with growth. Lack of vitamin C, which clinically is the basic defect of scurvy, does not appear to cause a defect in blood coagulation while vitamin K affects the clotting mechanism by being essential for the production of four distinct clotting factors: prothrombin, factors VII, IX and X. In this presentation an attempt is made to correlate the action of the vitamin K-dependent clotting factors grouping them in a diagram to show how two systems of thrombin formation exist, one being essentially intrinsic, the second extrinsic requiring tissue thromboplastin and factor VII. The possible interlocking of vitamin Q in this mechanism is presented.
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PMID:The role of vitamins in hemostasis. 113 16

Blood coagulation may be activated by the extrinsic or intrinsic pathways. The extrinsic clotting system is put into action by tissue thromboplastin, originating from injured tissue cells, but also from damaged leukocytes and erythrocytes. Tissue thromboplastin is a phospholipoprotein with an enzymatic component, capable of converting the clotting factor VII to its activated form, factor VIIa, which in turn activates factor X. The factor Xa-complex (containing also factor Va, phospholipid, and calcium) is the prothrombinconverting principle. The intrinsic clotting system is based on factors which are contained in the circulating blood. Its activation requires the availability of phospholipid and of activated factor XII (factor XIIa), or factor XIa. Factor XII is activated by collagen, i.e., whenever the vascular endothelium is injured, and to a lesser extent also by "activated" blood platelets. Platelets in turn are activated primarily by thrombin, collagen, and, in a self-perpetuating process, since all these materials are released from activated platelets, also by adenosine-5-diphosphate, adrenaline, and serotonin. The activation of platelets leads to a variety of morphological and biochemical alterations, culminating in their aggregation and in the selective release from storage organelles of different substances, among them those mentioned above. Of particular importance is the fact that in the course of platelet alterations, procoagulant phospholipid also becomes available on the platelet surface. The significance of the activation of the intrinsic system is seen in the possibility of the initiation of a self-sustained process which, after a primary event, e.g. vascular or cellular injury, will continue to convert prothrombin into thrombin. The effects of endotoxin on the blood clotting system show striking species differences. In the rabbit, endotoxin, with the involvement of factors of the complement system, will directly act upon blood platelets and thus initiate intravascular, intrinsic coagulation. In man, endotoxin remains without a direct effect on platelets and alternative possibilities of initiating thrombin formation must be considered. One possibility is extrinsic activation via tissue thromboplastin from injured leukocytes. Another pathway, which is supported by several experimental findings, starts out with endotoxin-mediated endothelial damage. Endothelial cells are in fact severely affected by endotoxin and may even be removed from the vascular wall, thus making accessible the subendothelial activator of factor XII. Thrombin in turn affects the vascular endothelium: therefore, one initiated, the process of intravascular activation of coagulation will perpetuate, this the more as platelets in turn will be stimulated into activity. The possible intervention of other vasoactive factors must also be considered...
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PMID:[Activation of the blood coagulation system during gram-negative infections and endotoxemias]. 122 91

Patients over 40 years of age who undergo elective orthopaedic surgery have a relatively high risk for developing post-surgical deep vein thrombosis (DVT). Prophylactic use of heparin or low molecular weight heparins can reduce the incidence of post-operative DVT by up to 80%. It is not known whether prophylaxis is achieved by inhibition of prothrombin activation or catalysis of thrombin inhibition in vivo. We determined the changes in concentrations of factor VII zymogen and thrombin-antithrombin III (the latter as an index of prothrombin activation) in the plasmas of 129 patients randomized to receive two daily subcutaneous injections of placebo or 30 mg of Enoxaparin after elective knee surgery. Enoxaparin reduced the frequency of post-surgical DVT by 70%. The concentration of factor VII zymogen had decreased by approximately 50% within 24 h after the knee surgery, followed by a gradual increase to near presurgical values. Additionally, post-Enoxaparin plasmas had statistically significant higher concentrations of factor VII zymogen than post-placebo plasmas. Post-Enoxaparin plasmas had significantly lower concentrations of endogenous thrombin-antithrombin III than comparable post-placebo plasmas. Finally, post-Enoxaparin plasmas inactivated exogenous factor Xa and thrombin more effectively than comparable post-placebo plasmas. As Enoxaparin moderated the generation of endogenous thrombin-antithrombin III after elective knee surgery, inhibition of prothrombin activation in vivo by Enoxaparin may be important for its prophylactic antithrombotic effect.
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PMID:The low molecular weight heparin Enoxaparin inhibits the consumption of factor VII and prothrombin activation in vivo associated with elective knee replacement surgery. 132 19

To study factor VII (F VII) hyperactivity in chronic dialysis patients, we measured the plasma levels of F VII activity (F VII c) and antigen (F VII Ag), prothrombin activation fragments 1 + 2 (F1 + 2), thrombin-antithrombin III complexes (TAT), and thrombomodulin in 28 patients on hemodialysis. Marked elevation of F VII c was found in long-term dialysis patients (185 +/- 30%). This hyperactivity was accompanied by both elevation of the F VII Ag level (153 +/- 28%) and enhanced activation of F VII zymogen, expressed as the F VII c/F VII Ag ratio (1.23 +/- 0.23), but pseudocholinesterase activity was decreased. The 6 patients with ischemic heart disease had slightly higher F VII c (200 +/- 25%) than those without ischemic heart disease (181 +/- 30%), although the difference was not significant. Increased F VII c was accompanied by factor Xa hyperactivity (a high plasma F1 + 2 level) in the long-term dialysis patients, but there was no significant elevation of plasma TAT levels when compared with controls matched for age, sex, and the presence or absence of diabetes mellitus. Plasma TAT levels were significantly correlated with plasma thrombomodulin levels, suggesting that thrombin generation in blood as a result of hemodialysis could induce systemic endothelial cell injury.
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PMID:Factor VII hyperactivity in chronic dialysis patients. 133 12

Recent epidemiologic studies found that there is a strong association of hemostatic factors with ischemic heart disease. The Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities (ARIC) Intraindividual Variability (IIV) Study was conducted to estimate the various components of variation in hemostasis factors measured in the ARIC Study and to estimate the measures of repeatability of these factors. A total of 39 subjects (16 men, 23 women) were studied. Each had blood collected three times, with a 1- to 2-week interval between each visit. The contributions of between-person variability, within-person (biologic) variability, and processing and assay variability were estimated. Then the reliability coefficient R was estimated as the proportion of total variance accounted for by between-person variance. The reliability coefficient can be interpreted as the correlation between measures made at repeat visits. Among the various analytes, the reliability coefficients were quite high for activated partial thromboplastin time and plasma factor VIII (R = 0.92, 0.86, respectively). Low repeatability was obtained for antithrombin III activity and protein C (R = 0.42, 0.56, respectively). The lack of repeatability for these variables derives mostly from the processing (field center and laboratory) variation. Other analytes--fibrinogen, plasma factor VII, and von Willebrand factor--were intermediate in repeatability. In comparing the analyte-specific high-level to low-level groups, no substantial difference of within-person plus method coefficient of variation between the two groups was found for any analyte except for factor VIII, whereas the corresponding variance components for most analytes were higher for the higher analyte level. Reliability coefficients from this ARIC IIV study are generally higher than those found in other studies, and this is related to the relative variations in populations studied and to the time between measurements.
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PMID:Short-term intraindividual variability in hemostasis factors. The ARIC Study. Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities Intraindividual Variability Study. 134 24

The intrinsic pathway of coagulation is initiated when zymogen factor VII binds to its cell surface receptor tissue factor to form a catalytic binary complex. Both the activation of factor VIIa and the expression of serine protease activity of factor VIIa are dependent on factor VII binding to tissue factor lipoprotein. To better understand the molecular basis of these rate-limiting events, the interaction of zymogen factor VII and tissue factor was investigated using as probes both a murine monoclonal antibody and a monospecific rabbit antiserum to human factor VII. To measure factor VIIa functional activity, a two-stage chromogenic assay was used; an assay which measures the factor Xa generated by the activation of factor VII to factor VIIa. Purified immunoglobulin from murine monoclonal antibody 231-7, which was shown to be reactive with amino acid residues 51-88 of the first epidermal growth factor-like (EGF) domain of human factor VII, inhibited the activation of factor VII to factor VIIa in a dose-dependent manner. The mechanism of this inhibition was demonstrated using a novel solid-phase ELISA which quantitatively measured the binding of purified factor VII zymogen to tissue factor adsorbed onto microtiter wells. Thus, the binding of factor VII zymogen to immobilized tissue factor was inhibited by antibody 231-7, again in a dose-dependent manner. Similar results were obtained using a monospecific rabbit antiserum to human factor VII which also reacted with the beta-galactosidase fusion proteins containing amino acid residues 51-88 (exon 4) of human factor VII. We conclude therefore that the exon 4-encoded amino acids of the first EGF domain of human factor VII constitute an essential domain participating in the binding of factor VII to tissue factor.
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PMID:The first epidermal growth factor domain of human coagulation factor VII is essential for binding with tissue factor. 137 73

Ten percent pentastarch is a low-molecular-weight hydroxyethyl starch with greater oncotic pressure and shorter intravascular persistence than 6% hetastarch. To evaluate its safety and efficacy as a component of cardiopulmonary bypass priming solution, we prospectively studied 90 patients undergoing coronary artery bypass grafting or valve replacement necessitating cardiopulmonary bypass (bubble oxygenator and moderate systemic hypothermia). Sixty patients were randomized to receive 75 gm of either 10% pentastarch (group P) or 25% albumin (group A), and 30 patients received lactated Ringer's solution alone (group C). Intravascular colloid osmotic pressure during cardiopulmonary bypass was highest with either of the colloid primes (15-minute measurement: group P, 15.7 +/- 2.2 mm Hg (mean +/- standard deviation); group A, 15.2 +/- 2.0 mm Hg; group C, 11.3 +/- 1.7 mm Hg; p less than 0.05, groups P and A compared with group C). This was associated with a lower volume requirement during cardiopulmonary bypass to maintain the venous reservoir (group P, 333 +/- 318 ml; group A, 483 +/- 472 ml; group C, 1332 +/- 1013 ml; p less than 0.05, groups P and A compared with group C). Urine output during cardiopulmonary bypass was similar in each group. Net intraoperative fluid balance was lowest in the colloid groups (groups P and A, 5.7 +/- 1.4 L; group C, 6.9 +/- 1.3 L; p less than 0.05, groups P and A compared with group C). Cardiac index shortly after weaning from cardiopulmonary bypass was greatest in group P (group P, 3.2 +/- 0.9; group A, 2.8 +/- 0.8; group C, 2.7 +/- 0.6 dyne.sec.cm-5; p less than 0.05, group P compared with group C). Changes in alveolar-arterial oxygen gradients, shunt fraction, and effective compliance were similar in all groups. During cardiopulmonary bypass, pentastarch appeared to cause the greatest degree of hemodilution, as suggested by the lowest hemoglobin, factor VII and IX levels and platelet count. The activated partial thromboplastin time was significantly prolonged during and immediately after cardiopulmonary bypass in group P relative to groups A and C (p less than 0.05), although there were no significant differences in the activated clotting time before cardiopulmonary bypass, during cardiopulmonary bypass, or after heparin neutralization. As well, clinical indices of hemostasis, including mediastinal drainage, red cell, platelet, and fresh frozen plasma requirements, and reoperation for excessive postoperative bleeding, were similar. We conclude that pentastarch, when used in cardiopulmonary bypass prime, is as safe as either albumin or Ringer's solution alone.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:The safety and efficacy of ten percent pentastarch as a cardiopulmonary bypass priming solution. A randomized clinical trial. 137 60

Coagulation disorders have been associated with the use of chemotherapeutic drugs. Pharmacological doses of cisplatin and adriamycin directly induced low levels of procoagulant on normal human blood monocytes and on a human myelomonocytic cell line, RC2a. Activity was maximal after 24 h and was not due to cell lysis as increasing drug doses which decreased cell viability were less effective. Procoagulant induction was markedly enhanced in the presence of bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS), with as little as 10-100 pg/ml LPS potentiating the cisplatin response by 2-5-fold and more than doubling the adriamycin response. Greater than 90% of the procoagulant activity was membrane-bound tissue factor as indicated by the factor VII-dependent generation of factor Xa by viable cells and by the neutralization of this activity by a monoclonal antibody to tissue factor. Tissue factor antigen was measured simultaneously by immunohistochemical staining and by cell ELISA. Blood monocytes activated with LPS expressed high levels of tissue factor antigen; by contrast, adriamycin and cisplatin did not appear to induce antigen expression, but to enhance the specific activity of that already present. Results suggest that membrane alterations which occur following treatment with DNA/RNA intercalating drugs, may result in a highly active form of monocyte/macrophage tissue factor which may contribute to the complications caused by activated coagulation. Secondary Gram-negative infection or cytokines released by an active immune response to a tumour may contribute to the procoagulant potential of these cytotoxic drugs.
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PMID:Modulation of tissue factor on human monocytes by cisplatin and adriamycin. 139 Feb 32


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