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

avWD is a rare entity that is primarily associated with lymphoproliferative disorders, most commonly with multiple myeloma, lymphoma, and the myeloproliferative diseases. Various pathogenetic mechanisms have been postulated. The most commonly seen is antibodies directed against the FVIII complex, resulting in either its accelerated destruction or its accelerated clearance by the reticuloendothelial system. There may be immunoadsorption of the FVIII complexes onto the clones of malignant cells, as has been reported in several cases, or proteolysis may be causing the peripheral destruction of the FVIII complex. Lastly, as seen in hypothyroidism, global decrease in production of the multimers also results in avWD. The treatment, in general, should be aimed at controlling the underlying disorder and at stopping any life-threatening hemorrhage. The treatment includes any or all of the following: DDAVP, cryoprecipitate, FVIII concentrates, extracorporeal immunoadsorption, and chemotherapy as needed to control the underlying disorders. The screening tests that will allow for the detection of the avWD include measurement of the bleeding time, the FVIII:C, FVIII:vWF, and the FVIII:RCoF. FVIII:C inhibitors can be demonstrated by mixing the patient plasma with normal plasma. A normal prothrombin time (PT), activated partial thromboplastin time (APTT), and thrombin time (TT) are expected. Clinically, these patients present with mucosal bleeding, and in avWD tend to have an association with lymphoproliferative malignancies. They tend to be elderly patients with no prior history of bleeding diathesis and to have negative family histories for coagulopathies. Further study of these patients is warranted, because this disorder appears to have a multifactorial etiology. Increasing our understanding of avWD may increase our understanding of congenital vWD, thus allowing us to more effectively treat all patients with von Willebrand's disease.
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PMID:Acquired von Willebrand's disease. 145 20

Laboratory tests recommended to screen patients with mucosal bleeding for hemostatic disorders generally include determinations of prothrombin time, partial thromboplastin time, platelet count, and bleeding time. To determine the best tests to identify patients with von Willebrand disease (vWD), we reviewed the laboratory studies of 24 children with vWD and performed receiver operating characteristic analysis on the diagnostic studies. The vWD disease diagnostic tests included determinations of vWF activity (ristocetin cofactor activity), vWF factor antigen, and factor VIII procoagulant (VIII:c). The diagnosis of vWD required the presence of a personal and family history of bleeding symptoms and a documented abnormality of vWF activity or vWF antigen. vWF activity, vWF antigen, factor VIII:c and blood type were determined in 104 symptom-free children. There were no differences between patients and normal subjects for age, gender, or blood type. The bleeding time was abnormal in 43%, the partial thromboplastin time was abnormal in 25%, and either one or both were abnormal in 58% of the patients. The vWF activity, vWF antigen, and factor VIII:c were abnormal in 79%, 58%, and 33%, respectively. Receiver-operated-characteristic analysis showed the vWF activity to be superior to either the vWF antigen or factor VIII:c in establishing the diagnosis of vWD. The combination of the activity, bleeding time, and partial thromboplastin time successfully identified 92% of the patients as abnormal. Determination of vWF activity should be included routinely in the evaluation of hemostasis in children with symptomatic disease.
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PMID:Relative value of diagnostic studies for von Willebrand disease. 162 90

To study the interaction of human factor VIII (FVIII) with its various ligands, select regions of cDNA encoding FVIII light chain were cloned into the plasmid expression vector pET3B to overproduce FVIII protein fragments in the bacterium Escherichia coli. Partially purified FVIII protein fragments were used to produce monoclonal antibodies. One monoclonal antibody, 60-B, bound both an FVIII protein fragment (amino acid residues 1563 through 1909) and recombinant human FVIII, but not porcine FVIII. This antibody prevented FVIII-vWF binding and acted as an inhibitor in both the activated partial thromboplastin time (APTT) assay and a chromogenic substrate assay that measured factor Xa generation. The ability of the antibody to inhibit FVIII activity was diminished in a dose-dependent fashion by von Willebrand factor. This anti-FVIII monoclonal antibody bound to a synthetic peptide, K E D F D I Y D E D E, equivalent to FVIII amino acid residues 1674 through 1684. The 60-B antibody did not react with a peptide in which the aspartic acid residue at 1681 (underlined) was changed to a glycine, which is the amino acid present at this position in porcine FVIII. Gel electrophoretic analysis of thrombin cleavage patterns of human FVIII showed that the 60-B antibody prevented thrombin cleavage at light chain residue 1689. The coagulant inhibitory activity of the 60-B antibody may be due, in part, to the prevention of thrombin activation of FVIII light chain.
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PMID:A monoclonal antibody to factor VIII inhibits von Willebrand factor binding and thrombin cleavage. 190 21

The congenital combined deficiency of Factor V and Factor VIII, a rare bleeding disorder, was identified in a 25-year-old woman. She was admitted to our hospital with a complaint of genital bleeding. Her prothrombin time and activated partial thromboplastin time were prolonged. She had low levels of Factor V coagulant activity (F. V:C) 14%, and Factor VIII coagulant activity (F. VIII:C), 12%, and normal levels of von Willebrand factor antigen (vWF:Ag), ristocetin cofactor (Rcof) and Protein C antigen. Her Protein C inhibitor level was slightly low. Her Rcof, vWF:Ag and F. VIII:C were elevated following administration of 1-deamino-8-D-arginine-vasopressin (DDAVP), but her F. V:C remained unchanged. Four years later, her F. VIII:C rose to 70% during the course of her pregnancy, but her F. V:C value remained low. It was expected that the vaginal delivery would be possible at the termination of pregnancy. Premature rupture of the membranes and an anomaly of rotation appeared in the course of delivery, however, and cesarean section was accomplished without excess bleeding under replacement therapy with Factor VIII concentrates. These findings suggested that DDAVP and Factor VIII concentrates were useful for management of her delivery. However the mechanisms of the rise of plasma F. VIII:C during pregnancy in a case with congenital combined deficiency of Factor V and Factor VIII are unclear.
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PMID:[Management of cesarean section under replacement therapy with factor VIII concentrates in a pregnant case with congenital combined deficiency of factor V and factor VIII]. 194 44

As an adjunct to a European multicentre prospective study, five quality assessment (QA) exercises, spanning a period of 2.5 years, were undertaken. In these, fifteen laboratories from eight countries each performed ten haemostatic factor assays. The design of the QA exercises allowed the between-duplicate, between-day and between-laboratory coefficients of variation (CVs) to be calculated. The between-duplicate CV decreased by a factor of one quarter, and the between-day CV by a factor of one third, over the five exercises. The activated partial thromboplastin time (APTT) assay consistently showed the lowest CVs, while there was notable improvement in the between-day CVs for von Willebrand factor related antigen (vWF R:Ag) and factor VIII clotting activity (VIII:C). However, the between-laboratory CV, assessing extent of agreement between the different laboratories, did not apparently improve over the five exercises. Thus, while QA exercises may be very useful in improving the performance of haemostatic assays according to criteria which an individual laboratory can assess, improving agreement on haemostatic assay results between laboratories may be more difficult to achieve.
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PMID:The impact of sequential quality assessment exercises on laboratory performance: the multicentre ECAT Angina Pectoris Study. Report from the European Concerted Action on Thrombosis and Disabilities (ECAT). 205

We determined the following coagulo-fibrinolytic activities in 24 patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) and 20 healthy adults: prothrombin time (PT), activated partial thromboplastin time (A-PTT), factor VIII: coagulant activity), von Willebrand factor antigen (vWF: Ag), antithrombin-III (AT-III), plasminogen (PLG), alpha 2 plasmin inhibitor (alpha 2 PI), alpha 2-plasmin inhibitor-plasmin complex (PIC), protein C (PC: activity and antigen concentration), and protein S (PS: total PS and free PS). PLG, AT-III, PC antigen concentration and total PS were significantly decreased in ten female controls as compared with ten male controls. Therefore, we used the ten healthy females as controls and excluded two male SLE patients in the analysis of the correlations of coagulo-fibrinolytic activities with lupus anticoagulant (LA), clinical and laboratory features in 22 female patients with SLE. In the SLE patients, PT was significantly shortened, while A-PTT was prolonged. PLG, PC activity and antigen, and total PS were significantly increased, and free PS levels were decreased in SLE. The shortened PT and decreased free PS suggest hypercoagulable states in SLE patients. A significant prolongation of A-PTT and a decrease of F VIII activity were observed in the six LA-positive SLE patients, and the results were considered as known effects of LA. Furthermore, vWF: Ag, AT-III and PC antigen levels were significantly increased in the LA-positive patients as compared with LA-negative patients. These changes indicate both vascular endothelial cell damages and a compensatory increase in coagulation inhibitors in the LA-positive patients.
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PMID:[Regulation of coagulo-fibrinolytic activity and lupus anticoagulants in systemic lupus erythematosus]. 212 31

A 67-year-old male with a prolonged activated partial thromboplastin time (APTT) of 43 seconds (normal, 25-40 seconds) was found to have laboratory features of von Willebrand's disease and IgA myeloma but had a normal bleeding time and no bleeding tendency. Plasma Factor VIII coagulant activity (F.VIII:C) was 80 U/L (0.08 U/mL), Factor VIII antigen (F.VIII:Ag) 70 U/L (0.07 U/mL), and von Willebrand's factor antigen (vWF:Ag) 50 U/L (0.05 U/mL) and ristocetin cofactor (vWF:RiCoF) 10 U/L (0.10 U/mL). The platelet vWF:Ag level was normal, whereas both platelet lysate and plasma vWF high molecular weight multimers were decreased. Patient plasma had no inhibitory effect on either F.VIII:C or vWF:RiCoF. However, when patient plasma was incubated with normal plasma, crossed immunoelectrophoresis for vWF:Ag demonstrated the presence of immune complexes. Infusion of 1-desamino-8-D-arginine vasopressin led to a transient correction of the plasma vWF:Ag multimer pattern. The survival of all components of vWF/F.VIII was decreased, as also occurred after cryoprecipitate. The levels of plasma F.VIII/vWF increased as the IgA values decreased after chemotherapy, whereas the platelet high molecular weight multimers remained decreased. The data suggest that the plasma vWF/F.VIII deficiency results from complexing of the IgA myeloma protein with vWF, resulting in premature clearance of the vWF/F.VIII complex. The absence of clinical bleeding likely results from the combination of a normal platelet vWF:Ag level and persistence of intermediate molecular weight vWF multimers.
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PMID:Absence of a bleeding tendency in severe acquired von Willebrand's disease. The role of platelet von Willebrand factor in maintaining normal hemostasis. 250 65

As part of a European multicentre prospective study involving the measurement of a number of haemostatic factors, a quality assessment (QA) scheme was organized. This paper describes the preparation, design and results of the first QA exercise, involving 16 European laboratories and 10 haemostatic assays. The design allowed the investigation, for each assay, of the variability between duplicates and the variability between days within each centre, and of the agreement between centres. A graphical presentation of each centre's performance in comparison to that of others was adopted, which preserved the confidentiality of each centre's results. The factor VIII clotting activity assay (VIII:C) and the rocket immuno-electrophoresis assays of von Willebrand factor related antigen (vWF R:Ag), antithrombin III, protein C and histidine-rich glycoprotein showed the highest between-duplicate and between-day coefficients of variation (CVs), whereas the clotting assays of activated partial thromboplastin time and fibrinogen had the lowest CVs. CVs for the enzymatic assays using synthetic substrates of antithrombin III, plasminogen and alpha-2-antiplasmin were between these extremes. The between-centre CVs were high for both the VIII:C and vWF R:Ag assays. The QA exercise showed that, in multicentre studies involving the measurement of haemostatic factors, it is feasible to undertake analysis locally at each centre.
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PMID:The measurement of haemostatic factors in 16 European laboratories: quality assessment for the Multicentre ECAT Angina Pectoris Study. Report from the European Concerted Action on Thrombosis and Disabilities (ECAT). 266 75

Eighty patients undergoing total hip replacement (THR) were randomly allocated to three groups. Group I (n = 29) received general anaesthesia, Group II (n = 29) epidural anaesthesia and Group III (n = 22) the same epidural as Group II and the same general anaesthesia as Group I but with a lower isoflurane concentration. Prothrombin time (PT), activated thromboplastin time (APTT), fibrinogen (FG), plasminogen (PG), antithrombin III (AT III), protein C (Proc C), alpha-2-antiplasmin (alpha 2AP), Factor VIII coagulating activity (F VIII:C), von Willebrand factor antigen (vWF:Ag), von Willebrand ristocetin cofactor (vWF:Rcof), tissue plasminogen activator (tPA) as antigen and activity were measured before induction (A), at the end of surgery (B), on the first postoperative morning (C) and 7 days postoperatively (D). The most relevant finding was that AT III was equally depressed immediately after surgery in all groups, but returned to normal significantly faster in the epidural group (mean values at C: 96.2% in Group I, 104.1% in Group II, 92.7% in Group III). The faster return to normal of AT III after epidural anaesthesia could be one of the mechanisms responsible for the beneficial effect of this technique on the prevention of thromboembolic complications.
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PMID:Coagulation and fibrinolytic parameters in patients undergoing total hip replacement: influence of the anaesthesia technique. 268 46

A study of the absorption of 300 micrograms of 1-deamino-8-D-arginine vasopressin (DDAVP) given intranasally to normal blood donors was carried out to determine (a) the correlation between plasma levels of DDAVP and the percent rise of factor VIII procoagulant activity (VIII:C) and (b) the efficacy, specificity and safety of this treatment in increasing the recovery of factor VIII:C in donated blood. The maximum drug concentration was highly correlated to the maximum percent rise of VIII:C (r = 0.858, p less than 0.01). A differentiated effect of DDAVP on increases of VIII:C, VIII:Ag, vWF:Ag and vWF multimers was observed. A transient rise of fibrinopeptide A from 5 to 16 ng/ml, 30 min post-DDAVP, was not accompanied by changes in fibrinogen levels or generation of detectable factor Xa or thrombin. DDAVP had no effect on the factor XII-dependent pathway of plasminogen activation, or on the donor's vital signs and hematological parameters. Side effects were minor and of short duration. Intranasal DDAVP treatment of blood donors is considered to be a practical means of improving the recovery of VIII:C from normal donors.
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PMID:Effectiveness, specificity and safety of intranasal 1-deamino-8-D-arginine vasopressin treatment of normal blood donors. 297 94


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