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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)
The in vitro effects of N-3-(1-benzyl-cycloheptyloxy)-propyl-N,N-dimethylammonium-hydrogenfumarate (bencyclan) on clotting, fibrinolytic and platelet function test were investigated by adding the drug to normal human plasma. An anticoagulant activity, mainly of an antithromboplastin nature (directed against later stages of intrinsic
thromboplastin
formation and against tissue
thromboplastin
), was observed, while thrombin phase was unaffected. No effect was found in the fibrinolytic system tested (euglobulin lysis, UK-activated fibrinolysis, "hanging clot" method). The drug, although capable of aggregating platelets by itself at very high concentrations, showed a striking inhibitory effect, over a wide range of concentrations, both on platelet aggregation induced by
ADP
, epinephrine or collagen and on platelet adhesiveness to glass or collagen. Clot retraction was also clearly inhibited. PF3 availability was influenced with a peculiar two-phase behaviour dose-dependently. High concentrations showed a promoting action, while the lower were obviously inhibitory. It is suggested that the effects on platelet function may be due to an influence of the drug on cell membrane.
...
PMID:In vitro effects of bencyclan on coagulation, fibrinolysis and platelet function. 1 70
alpha(2)-Plasmin inhibitor (alpha(2)PI) is a recently characterized, fast-reacting plasmin inhibitor in human plasma that appears to play an important role in regulation of in vivo fibrinolysis. We report here a case of complete deficiency of alpha(2)PI in man. The patient, a 25-yr-old Japanese man, had a life-long severe bleeding tendency (hemarthrosis and excessive bleeding after trauma). The following tests were within normal limits: platelet count, bleeding time, thrombin time, prothrombin time, partial
thromboplastin
time, titers of known clotting factors, platelet glass bead retention, Factor VIII-related antigen, platelet aggregation by
ADP
, collagen and ristocetin, and clot retraction. Routine liver function tests were also normal. The only abnormal finding was that whole blood clot lysis was extemely rapid and was complete in 4-8 h. The concentration of plasma protease inhibitors, including alpha(2)-macro-globulin, antithrombin III, alpha(1)-antitrypsin, and C1INH, were all normal. The concentration of alpha(2)-PI in the patient's plasma, assayed by immunological methods, was <0.1 mg/100 ml (normal concentration, 6.1+/-0.88 mg/100 ml [mean+/-SE]) and functional assays showed a complete deficiency of alpha(2)PI. Addition of purified alpha(2)PI to the patient's whole blood completely corrected the accelerated fibrinolysis. The patient's parents, four siblings, and four other members of this family were asymptomatic, but the titers of alpha(2)PI in their plasmas were congruent with50% of normal pooled plasma. There were three consanguineous marriages in this family, and the alpha(2)PI deficiency appears to have been inherited as an autosomal recessive trait. We speculate that alpha(2)PI deficiency in this patient has led to uninhibited in vivo fibrinolysis that probably causes the severe hemorrhagic tendency. Thus, this study indicates the important role of alpha(2)PI in hemostasis.
...
PMID:Congenital deficiency of alpha 2-plasmin inhibitor associated with severe hemorrhagic tendency. 15 96
Platelets provide a procoagulant activity for the conversion of prothrombin to thrombin during normal hemostatis. This activity designated as platelet prothrombin-converting activity (PPCA) was monitored as rate of thrombin production in a two-stage assay using gel-filtered bovine platelets,
factor Xa
, and prothrombin. Expression of PPCA was not associated with
ADP
-induced release or platelet shape change but was associated with aggregation. Release of the contents of dense bodies, measured by release of 14C-5-hydroxytryptamine, was not required for expression of PPCA during platelet aggregation. During the PPCA assay, 5-hydroxytrypamine was released, but only after onset of thrombin production. Furthermore, the release of 5-hydroxytryptamine was retarded during the assay by the addition of 2 mM theophylline and 100 nM prostaglandin E1 without a comparable reduction in PPCA. In addition, 125I-factor-Xa was bound in greater amounts to platelets (aspirin-treated) after
ADP
-induced aggregation (without detectable release) than to unactivated control platelets. Finally, the PPCA of the
ADP
-activated platelets was saturated with respect to factors Xa and Va at less than 1 nM concentrations, indicating that the aggregation induced by
ADP
leads to the exposure of specific procoagulant sites by some process other than dense body secretion.
...
PMID:The effect of aggregation and release on platelet prothrombin-converting activity. 46 34
Ischemic optic neuropathy and retinal arterial occlusion are 2 forms of arterial occlusive disease affecting the eye. Reports in the literature suggest platelet hyperactivity in acute arterial occlusive diseases affecting other organ systems. Therefore, 14 patients with ischemic optic neuropathy and 17 patients with central or branch retinal artery occlusion were studied to determine whether platelets have a role in the pathogenesis of these vascular occlusive disorders. The results of the following investigations were no different in these patients compared with those in 18 control patients with non-vascular eye diseases: prothrombin times, partial
thromboplastin
times, plasma fibrinogen, factor V, factor VIII, platelet counts and threshold concentrations of
ADP
, epinephrine and collagen resulting in secondary platelet aggregation and serotonin release. In contrast, platelet coagulant activities concerned with the early stages of intrinsic coagulation were significantly increased in patients with retinal artery occlusion without hypertension or type IV hyperlipoproteinemia, but generally normal in patients with ischemic optic neuropathy and in patients with retinal artery occlusion associated with hypertension, type IV hyperlipoproteinemia, diabetes mellitus and generalized atherosclerosis. These results are consistent with a platelet contribution to retinal arterial occlusive disease in patients without other known contributing factors such as hypertension, serum lipid abnormalities, diabetes mellitus and generalized atherosclerosis and may have implications regarding prophylaxis.
...
PMID:Platelet coagulant activities in arterial occlusive disease of the eye. 50 1
A comparison has been made of some effects of a semi-synthetic heparin analogue, A73025, and heparin upon platelet function. In several of the in vitro tests performed, such as their potentiating effects on
ADP
and adrenaline induced aggregation and their effects on the aggregation of washed platelets by
activated factor X
, heparin proved to be more potent than A73025. Following intravenous injection of twice the quantity of A73025, an equivalent anti-
factor Xa
activity was obtained, in the agreement with our previous studies. However, it was found that PRP containing heparin and A73025 with comparable anti-Factor Xa acitvity responded differently to the addition of thrombin, as A73025 barely inhibited thrombin induced aggregation. Similarly, A73025 had little effect on the dilute thrombin clotting time of plasma, following intravenous injection. Heparin and A73025 were neutralized to approximately the same degree by a crude PF4 preparation.
...
PMID:Comparison of heparin and a semi-synthetic heparin analogue, A73025. II. Some effects on platelet function. 60 58
By means of CM-Sephadex column chromatography, Trimeresurus mucrosquamatus venom was separated into 20 fractions. Fraction XX had the marked anticoagulant action. This fraction was refractionated three times on Sephadex G-75, and a single peak was obtained. The patterns of microzone and disc electrophoresis also showed a single band. A single, symmetrical boundary with a value of 1.61 S was obtained by ultracentrifugation. It was a single peptide chain with a molecular weight of 11 700. The isoelectric point was higher than pH 10. The anticoagulant principle possessed phospholipase A activity and was calcium ion dependent. It did not possess proteolytic, tosyl-L-arginine methyl ester esterase, phosphodiesterase and alkaline phosphomonoesterase activities of the crude venom. The phospholipase A activity was heat-labile at pH 7.4, but was heat-stable at pH 5.6. The anticoagulant activity was more resistant to heat treatment as compared with phospholipase A activity. The anitoagulant action of the purified principle was competitively inhibited by platelet phospholid, tissue
thromboplastin
and cephalin, and was neutralized by antiserum. The anticoagulant principle inhibited platelet aggregation induced by
ADP
. It did not destroy fibrinogen, Factor X, prothrombin and thrombin; nor did it induce fibrinolysis nor interfere with the interaction between thrombin and fibrinogen. It is concluded that the anticoagulant action of this phospholipase A was due to the inhibition of the activations of Factors X and II through the inactivation of the procoagulant activity of phospholipids mediated partly by phospholipid-binding activity of this venom enzyme and partly by its enzymatic hydrolysis of phospholipids.
...
PMID:Purification and characterization of the anticoagulant principle of Trimeresurus mucrosquamatus venom. 66 29
To determine whether platelets play a part in the pathogenesis of transient cerebrovascular ischemia, we studied 22 patients with transient ischemia, 18 control patients and 38 normal subjects. Platelet aggregation and [14C]-serotonin release by
ADP
, epinephrine and collagen were normal in all patients, as were plasma coagulation assays, except for shortened partial
thromboplastin
times in the patients with transient ischemia. Platelet coagulant activities concerned with initiation and early stages of intrinsic coagulation were increased two to three times in 12 patients with transient ischemic attacks with normal serum lipids and normal in the 10 others with Type IV hyperlipoproteinemia. These results indicate an association between platelet coagulant hyperactivity and transient ischemic attacks in a group of patients with normal serum lipids.
...
PMID:Platelet coagulant activities and serum lipids in transient cerebral ischemia. 95 87
Multiple coagulation studies were carried out in eight healthy young men at sea level (SL) and after 1, 24, and 48 h at a simulated altitude of 4,400 m. Platelet aggregation, as induced by
ADP
, epinephrine, and collagen, was not significantly altered by high-altitude (HA) exposure. Mean 2,3-diphosphoglycerate, a physiological inhibitor of platelet aggregation, rose (P less than 0.001) after 24 h at HA and remained elevated while no changes in circulating catecholamines were observed. Platelet count, factor 3 availability, and membrane lipid peroxide formation were likewise unaltered at HA, as were prothrombin and thrombin times and protamine paracoagulation test. However, mean partial
thromboplastin
time was significantly shortened (P less than 0.01) after 1 and 24 h at HA, recovering to SL control by 48 h. Fibrinogen and factor VIII levels also fell (P less than 0.01 and P less than 0.02) after 1 h at HA but returned to the preexposure values by 24 h. Fibrin degradation products were transiently detectable in three subjects at HA. Thus, although normal platelet function did not appear to be modified by short-term exposure to simulated high altitude, evidence for a coagulopathy was obtained.
...
PMID:Human coagulation abnormalities during acute exposure to hypobaric hypoxia. 99 58
Hemorrhagic diathesis was observed in patients with renal insufficiency after carbenicillin at serum levels greater than 300 mug/ml. Normal coagulation factors (F. I, II, V, VII, VIII, X), normal PTT, normal platelet counts, negative ethanol gelation test (fibrin monomers) were found as well as a prolongation of
thromboplastin
time (Quick), thrombin time, reptilase time and thrombin coagulase time. Platelet function was disturbed. In addition, the plasmatic system was involved: inhibition of fibrinogen-fibrin conversion (Belitser assay) and enhanced antithrombin III activity; in vivo the latter was ascribed to a heparin-like activity. In vitro, abnormal III was seen: however an enhanced antithrombin III activity in vitro was not found with carbenicillin and various penicillin derivatives. This study demonstrates that carbenicillin, in addition to its known effect on platelet function, also disturbs the plasmatic coagulation system. This additional effect of carbenicillin is clinically important since protamin chloride effectively blocks bleeding without interfering with antibacterial activity. Both penicillin and penicillin derivatives have been shown to interfere with hemostasis and to cause clinically manifest hemorrhagic diathesis (Fleming and Fish 1947, Lurie et al. 1970a, b, McClure et al. 1970, Yudis et al. 1972, Demos 1971, Waisbren et al. 1971). Carbenicillin interferes with
ADP
-, collagen- or thrombin-induced platelet aggregation and with the release reaction both in vivo (McClure et al. 1970, Cazenae et al. 1973) and in vitro (McClure et al. 1970, Cazenave et al. 1973). In addition Lurie and colleagues (1970b) concluded that an inhibition of the conversion of fibrinogen to fibrin is involved although no experimental details were given. Later Brown and colleagues (1974) concluded that carbenicillin at usual dose levels "only affects the platelet component of hemostasis and has little effect on fibrin formation or other phases of coagulation in patients with normal renal function".
...
PMID:Bleeding in uremic patients after carbenicillin. 103
Three members of a Virginia family with a bleeding disorder were found to have a serum defect in
thromboplastin
generation similar to the previously reported "Car. factor" deficiency. Sera from three members of the original Car. family did not correct the defect of affected members of the Virginia family. Partial
thromboplastin
times of Car. deficient individuals and affected members of the Virginia family were normal. Although correction with normal serum is attained in vitro, the serum defect persisted after infusion of fresh frozen plasma. Platelet function studies of the Virginia family revealed less than 30% aggregation after the addition of exogenous
ADP
and disaggregation within 2 min. Evaluation of children with Noonan's syndrome, albinism, and "Portsmouth" syndrome showed coexistent platelet aggregation defects and nonspecific serum defects.
...
PMID:"Car. factor" deficiency revisited. 109 60
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