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)

To evaluate the potential effect of aspirin, a platelet inhibitory agent, on postoperative bleeding complications after coronary artery bypass graft surgery, we compared each of nine patients who had taken aspirin within 7 days prior to operation to one or two control subjects (total 16 patients) matched for age, sex, extent of coronary disease, number of grafts placed total operative time, bypass time, and preoperative use of propranolol. Preoperative prothrombin time, partial thromboplastin time, and platelet counts were normal for all patients. Mean mediastinal blood loss was significantly greater in the aspirin group (919 +/- 164 ml., S.E.) than in the control group (437 +/- 61 ml., p less than 0.001). The degree of mediastinal blood loss did not correlate with patient age, total operative time, bypass time, number of vessels diseased, or grafts placed. In addition, compared to controls the aspirin group required prolonged chest tube drainage (33 +/- 5 hours versus 19 +/- 1 hour, p less than 0.001).
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PMID:Relation of preoperative use of aspirin to increased mediastinal blood loss after coronary artery bypass graft surgery. 30 32

Some problems involved in grading the severity of hemophilia were discussed. No definite correlation existed between the clinical severity of hemophilia and the results of coagulation tests (activity of deficient factors, whole blood clotting time, thromboplastin screening test). There was also no correlation between the presence or absence of oral bleeding or hemarthrosis and the test results. It was concluded that the clinical severity of the disease can be graded more reasonably on the basis of clinical hemorrhagic symptoms than according to the activity of deficient factors.
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PMID:Problems involved in grading the severity of hemophilia by test results. 30 32

New data were derived from records of 115 patients undergoing portacaval or spenorenal shunts from 1966 to 1973. The last serum bilirubin level determined before a shunt was the best predictor of operative mortality. The strongest predictor of long term survival was the first serum albumin level measured after admission. Operative mortality was strongly correlated with intraoperative clotting disorders; however, the prothrombin time and the partial thromboplastin time predicated long term survival. Clinical assessment added unique information to conclusion derived from laboratory tests. Results of operation were independent of the skill and experience of the surgeon, except that the best risk patients perhaps may have done better when operated upon by the most experienced surgeons. Once a patient has stabilized after a bleeding episode, he might as well be operated upon at the same admission rather than be discharged to be operated upon at a later arbitrary time.
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PMID:Tests and management affecting survival after portacaval and spenorenal shunts. 31 8

The prevalence of immunologic and coagulation disorders in 75 schizophrenic patients treated with chlorpromazine or other antipsychotic drugs was evaluated. Four groups were studied: Group A, chlorpromazine treatment for more than 2 1/2 years; Group B, chlorpromazine and other antipsychotic drug treatment for more than 2 1/2 years; Group C, chlorpromazine treatment for less than 2 1/2 years; Group D, no chlorpromazine, but other antipsychotic drug treatment. Significant elevation of serum IgM and prolongation of partial thromboplastin time were noted in patients who had long-term chlorpromazine treatment. The latter was caused by a circulating inhibitor resembling that seen with systemic lupus erythematosus. There was a significant correlation between the IgM level versus chlorpromazine dose or duration of treatment and the partial thromboplastin time versus chlorpromazine dose or duration of treatment. In Groups A and B, 63% had a positive antinuclear antibody test (greater than or equal to 1:80), 40% had antibodies to native DNA, and 58% had antibodies to nucleoprotein. These antibodies were negative in the other groups. The percentages of T lymphocytes were below normal in 13 of 41 patients treated with chlopromazine. Twenty of 42 patients in Groups A and B, and none of 28 in Groups C and D had splenomegaly. This study indicates that most patients on long-term chlorpromazine treatment develop one or more immunologic abnormalities.
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PMID:Immunologic and coagulation disorders in chlorpromazine-treated patients. 31 32

The clinical course of necrotizing fasciitis in 8 patients is compared with observations on 22 other patients with erysipelas. In necrotizing fasciitis the early erythematous areas turn into a dusky blue colour with later vesiculation and formation of bullae. An important finding is a non-pitting oedema extending outside the erythematous patches. The disease often progresses and involves further skin areas proximal to the initial ones. Gangrene tends to follow in multiple sites after the 1st week of illness. Group A streptococci in conjunction with widespread thrombosis and vascular necrosis of the involved skin are two major factors in the pathogenesis of the gangrene. Early debridement and excision of necrotic tissue in combination with large doses of penicillin and cloxacillin are confirmed as mandatory to remove toxaemia and inhibit further necrosis of the skin. In 3 of the 8 patients with necrotizing fasciitis the syndrome of disseminated intravascular coagulation complicated the course of the disease. A promising therapeutic result was seen in 2 further patients exhibiting alarming signs and symptoms of early necrotizing fasciitis; the combination of heparin, given intravenously in therapeutic doses guided by activated partial thromboplastin time studies, and of systemic antibiotics alleviated the symptoms, which vanished within 10 days of the start of treatment.
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PMID:Erysipelas and necrotizing fasciitis. 32 13

The diagnosis of defibrination syndrome in shock, sepsis and neonatal hypoxia is based, in addition to the clinical picture, upon a few parameters of the hemostatic system, which, in part as global tests, provide information about the course of coagulation. The parameters measured are partial thromboplastin time, thromboplastin time, plasma thrombin time, fibrinogen, thrombin-coagulase and reptilase times as well as platelet count. Normal values of these laboratory parameters were established for healthy newborns 1--5 days of age, and for healthy adults. It is suggested that especially partial thromboplastin time, the thrombin-coagulase and reptilase times, the latter influenced by fibrinolysis cleavage products, are representative for the tentative diagnosis of disseminated intravascular coagulation with fibrinolysis syndrome (DICFS). The platelet fall often lags 1--2 days behind the event. Moreover normal values for newborns, are markedly higher than those for older children or adults. In the presence of DICFS, a low-dose heparin therapy is immediately initiated. If completed defibrination is manifest, therapy is supplemented with urokinase and streptokinase, For DICFS with congenital sepsis, an exchange transfusion with heparinized fresh blood is the treatment of choice.
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PMID:[Diagnostic therapeutic problems of defibrination syndrome in shock, sepsis, and neonatal hypoxia (author's transl)]. 32 24

The antiflammatory drug indomethacin, an inhibitor of prostaglandin synthesis, prevents the generalized Shwartzman reaction produced in rabbits by two intravenous injections of bacterial endotoxin. Indomethacin has this effect if given before the first but not the second injection of endotoxin. Measurements of circulating white blood cells, platelets, partial thromboplastin time, prothrombin time, fibrinogen, plasminogen, and soluble fibrin were made at several times after either the first or second injection of endotoxin treated and nontreated rabbits. Four hours after the first injection of endotoxin, leukopenia and thrombocytopenia were somewhat greater in treated rabbits and the prolongation of the activated partial thromboplastin time was shortened. Twenty-one hours after injection of endotoxin, leukocytosis and elevation of plasma fibrinogen were not as great in treated animals. Four hours following the second injection of endotoxin a decrease in fibrinogen, prolongation of the prothrombin time, and the elaboration of soluble fibrin were consistently found in rabbits with the generalized Shwartzman reaction. In treated rabbits, none of these changes occurred. Indomethacin prevents the generalized Shwartzman reaction by preventing the development of the prepared state in this endotoxin model.
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PMID:The effects of indomethacin on the generalized shwartzman reaction. 33 45

The British comparative thromboplastin (BCT) was used to monitor the effectiveness of oral anticoagulants in preventing deep vein thrombosis (DVT) in patients undergoing major gynaecological surgery. All patients were screened for DVT with the use of the (125)I-fibrinogen scan.One hundred and forty-five patients aged 40 years or more were randomised into three groups. Group 1 received oral anticoagulant (nicoumalone) treatment, stabilised over five days before surgery and continuing into the second postoperative week. The other patients served as two contrast groups and were managed on a double-blind basis. Group 2 received a subcutaneous low-dose regimen of heparin calcium. Group 3 received subcutaneous saline. Eleven of 48 patients in the saline group, three of 49 patients in the heparin group, and three of 48 patients in the oral anticoagulant group developed DVT as judged by (125)I-fibrinogen scanning. The incidences in groups 1 and 2 were significantly lower than in the saline group. The falls in haemoglobin concentration and incidence of haemorrhage were similar in all three groups.The study showed that oral anticoagulant prophylaxis stabilised preoperatively and low-dose heparin were equally effective in preventing deep vein thrombosis in a moderate-risk group. Immediate preoperative prothrombin ratios of 2.0-2.5 and postoperative ratios of 2.0-4.0 with the BCT gave adequate protection without increased haemorrhagic risk.
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PMID:Oral anticoagulants controlled by the British comparative thromboplastin versus low-dose heparin in prophylaxis of deep vein thrombosis. 34 5

The macrophage is the characteristic cell type in chronic inflammatory reactions, in the rheumatoid synovium, as in other sites. When macrophages are activated, considerable synthesis of enzymes and other proteins occurs. Macrophages can be activated by (i) products of activated lymphocytes, (ii) immune complexes and (iii) the complement cleavage product C3b. Among the many consequences of macrophage activation are (i) secretion of hydrolytic enzymes, (ii) cleavage of C3 into C3a, which is cytolytic, and C3b, (iii) production of tissue thromboplastin, a powerful procoagulant, and (iv) formation of polyamine oxidase, which in the presence of appropriate substrates generates factors that lyse or limit the proliferation of tumour cells, lymphocytes and micro-organisms. The relevance of these observations to the pathogenesis of chronic inflammatory reactions is discussed.
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PMID:The role of macrophage activation in chronic inflammation. 34 81

The clinical significance and pathogenesis of the platelet dysfunction following cardiopulmonary bypass were studied in conjunction with the degree of functional impairment associated with the use of membrane and bubble oxygenators. Forty consecutive patients had the following tests preoperatively and postoperatively: complete blood count (CBC), platelet count, prothrombin consumption time, bleeding time, prothrombin time, partial thromboplastin time, fibrinogen, euglobulin clot lysis, fibrin degradation products, and platelet aggregation tests. Six patients were given 14C-serotonin tests before and after operation, and preoperative and postoperative electron micrographs were made of the platelets of 3 patients. The amount of blood lost, the blood transfused, and plasma hemoglobin levels were also measured. Abnormal aggregation of platelets was found, with no difference between the membrane and bubble oxygenators. In vitro aggregation tests with protamine sulfate and hemoglobin solutions, as well as the 14C-serotonin studies and electron micrographs, suggest that platelets acquire storage pool deficiency and an abnormal membrane during cardiopulmonary bypass.
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PMID:Platelet dysfunction associated with cardiopulmonary bypass. 34 86


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