Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:3.4.21.69 (
APC
)
16,337
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The acute phase reaction is a molecular response to noxious stimuli. Over 50 glycoproteins have been identified as reactants. While this is likely a protective response, some of the changes could be detrimental to body homeostasis. The objective of this study was to examine whether an acute phase reaction occurs in diabetic patients with foot ulcers. In age- and sex-matched populations, measurements of
C-reactive protein
, fibrinogen, albumin, hematocrit, whole blood viscosity and
protein C
were performed on: (i) 24 diabetic patients with a foot ulcer (group A); (ii) eight diabetic patients without foot ulcer (group B); and (iii) seven patients without diabetes (group C). Analysis of variance was used to compare means of each respective group (mean (s.d.)). Group A demonstrated an increase in
C-reactive protein
(5.6 (5.4) mg/dl) compared with group B (0.78 (0.46) mg/dl; P = 0.013) and group C (0.71 (0.26) mg/dl; P = 0.026). Fibrinogen was also increased in group A (619 (205) mg/dl) compared with group B (310 (58) mg/dl; P = 0.005) and group C (370 (88) mg/dl; P = 0.04). Hematocrit (37 (6)%) and albumin (3.5 (0.5) g/dl) were decreased in group A compared with group B (hematocrit 46 (4)%; P < 0.0001; albumin 4.3 (0.3) g/dl; P = 0.0005) and group C (hematocrit 45 (3)%; P = 0.005; albumin 4.6 (0.3) g/dl; P < 0.0001). No difference was found in whole blood viscosity and levels of
protein C
. There also was no significant difference demonstrated between any of the parameters studied when comparing groups B and C. In conclusion, these results indicate that diabetic patients with a foot ulcer undergo an acute phase reaction as evidenced by a rise in
C-reactive protein
and fibrinogen compared with diabetic patients without a foot ulcer and normal control patients. As more is learned about the acute phase reaction, this information may prove valuable in the management of the diabetic patient.
...
PMID:An acute phase reaction in diabetic patients with foot ulcers. 915 20
The prevalence of haemostasis abnormalities was evaluated in 500 consecutive women with unexplained primary recurrent miscarriages. Two matched reference groups with no antecedent of miscarriage were studied: 100 healthy mothers and 50 childless women. In the prospective part of the study, we found 9.4% of the patients (95% C.I.: 6.8-12%) with an isolated factor XII deficiency, 7.4% of the patients (5.0-9.8%) with primary antiphopholipid antibodies, 47% of the patients (42.6-51.4%) with an insufficient response to the venous occlusion test and an isolated hypofibrinolysis was found in 42.6% (38.2-47%) of the patients (reference groups: respectively 0/150, 3/150, 2/150, p < 10(-3)). Willebrand disease, fibrinogen, deficiency, antithrombin,
protein C
or protein S deficiencies were not more frequent in recurrent aborters than in members of the reference groups. In the retrospective part of the study, cases of plasma resistance to
activated protein C
were not abnormally frequent. Patients had higher Willebrand factor antigen (vWF), tissue-type plasminogen activator antigen (t-PA), plasminogen activator inhibitor activity (PAI) and D-dimers (D-Di) than the reference women. Values of vWF, t-PA, PAI and D-Di were altogether correlated but were not related to
C-reactive protein
concentrations. Among patients, those with an antiphospholipid syndrome and those with an insufficient response to the venous occlusion test had higher vWF, t-PA, PAI and D-Di values than the patients with none of the haemostasis-related abnormalities. Thus, factor XII deficiency and hypofibrinolysis (mainly high PAI) are the most frequent haemostasis-related abnormalities found in unexplained primary recurrent aborters. In patients with antiphospholipid antibodies or hypofibrinolysis, there is a non-inflammatory ongoing chronic elevation of markers of endothelial stimulation associated with coagulation activation. This should allow to define subgroups of patients for future therapeutic trials.
...
PMID:Respective evaluation of the prevalence of haemostasis abnormalities in unexplained primary early recurrent miscarriages. The Nimes Obstetricians and Haematologists (NOHA) Study. 924 39
In this study, we asked whether the serum acute-phase
protein C
-reactive protein (
CRP
) increased in large surfactant aggregates after lung transplantation and analyzed the changes in composition and interfacial adsorption activity of those aggregates. Single left lung transplantation was performed in weight-matched pairs of dogs. A double-lung block from the donor animal was flushed with either modified Euro-Collins solution (EC) (n = 6) or University of Wisconsin solution (UW) (n = 6) at 4 degrees C followed by immersion in cold EC or UW for 22 h. The left donor lung was transplanted. The recipient dog was then reperfused for 4.5 h. Irrespective of the preservation fluid, gas exchanged was impaired in the transplanted lung after 4.5 h of reperfusion. Large surfactant aggregates obtained from this lung showed reduced ability to rapidly adsorb to an air-liquid interface. Phospholipid (PL) content and PL composition of surfactant from lung transplants was similar to that of the control lungs. However, the content of surfactant protein A decreased after reperfusion. In addition, Western blot analyses showed that levels of
CRP
increased in surfactant from transplanted but not from donor lungs. The addition of human
CRP
to control surfactant (
CRP
:PL weight ratio, 0.01:1) caused a decrease of surfactant adsorption. We conclude that the impairment of adsorption facilities of surfactant from transplanted lungs may be correlated with decreased levels of surfactant protein A and increased levels of
CRP
. The presence of elevated levels of
CRP
in bronchoalveolar lavage could be a very sensitive marker of lung injury.
...
PMID:Increase of C-reactive protein and decrease of surfactant protein A in surfactant after lung transplantation. 944 77
We monitored 30 laboratory hemostatic parameters in an attempt to better comprehend alterations in coagulation and fibrinolysis in 10 patients with hematological malignancies subjected to autologous peripheral blood stem cell transplantation (APBSCT). These parameters were assessed before and just after high-dose conditioning chemotherapy, on days 1, 7, 14 and 28. Although, clinical manifestations associated with fibrino-coagulation disorders never occurred, including veno-occlusive disease, a statistically significant increase was seen in 7 of 30 parameters, compared to values seen before conditioning chemotherapy. These were subdivided into early and late phase parameters. The early phase parameters, which increased during the first day after the conditioning chemotherapy was given, then returned to baseline values, included
protein C
, plasma tissue factor and tissue-plasminogen activator. The late phase parameters, which increased over baseline values during days 7 to 28, included free-protein S, fibrinogen, plasmin-alpha2-plasmin inhibitor complex and soluble-thrombomodulin. The increase of early phase parameters, as produced by the liver and by endothelial cells, may reflect tissue damage by conditioning chemotherapy. Late phase parameters increased in parallel with
C-reactive protein
, which suggests a correlation with the degree of inflammation, such as the presence of infective disease during neutropenia. These subclinical alterations in coagulation and fibrinolysis which take on a biphasic pattern during the course of APBSCT should be kept in mind by the attending physicians during therapy.
...
PMID:Subclinical alterations in coagulation and fibrinolysis in patients undergoing autologous peripheral blood stem cell transplantation. 951 13
We studied hemostatic and inflammatory cardiovascular risk factors (CVRF), and total plasma homocysteine (tHcy) in 26 vegetarians (23 lacto- or ovolactovegetarians and 3 vegans), matched by age, sex and socioeconomic status with omnivorous controls. Vegetarians had significantly lower proportion of eicosapentaenoic (EPA) and docosahexaenoic (DHA) acids in plasma lipids, significantly shortened bleeding time, and increased blood platelet count and in vitro platelet function (aggregation and secretion). Plasma levels of all coagulation or fibrinolytic factors and natural inhibitors synthesized in the liver were lower in vegetarians than in controls. Whereas for some factors this decrease was statistically significant (fibrinogen, factor VIIc, antithrombin III, protein S, plasminogen) for the remaining (factors VIIIc, Vc, prothrombin,
protein C
) a trend in the same direction was found. For hemostatic proteins of predominantly extrahepatic origin (von Willebrand factor. tPA, PAI-1) this tendency was not present. No significant differences in inflammatory proteins (
C-reactive protein
and alpha1-protease inhibitor) were detected in both groups. tHcy was significantly increased in vegetarians, and correlated only with cobalamin levels. The increased platelet function and tHcy found in vegetarians may counteract the known cardiovascular health benefits of vegetarian diet (VD).
...
PMID:Vegetarians and cardiovascular risk factors: hemostasis, inflammatory markers and plasma homocysteine. 1040 67
Increased levels of the acute phase
protein C
-reactive protein (
CRP
) in plasma may indicate severe acute abdominal disease, risk of serious postoperative complications or malignancy; serial measurements may indicate postoperative complications, relapse of intra-abdominal sepsis and complications during acute pancreatitis. The increase in
CRP
is an unspecific acute phase reaction, however, and low levels do not exclude these conditions. These facts are important obstacles to the clinical routine use of
CRP
measurements. The aim of this study was to look for possible biochemical microheterogeneity of
CRP
in single plasma samples from various large groups of patients to overcome these problems. Two-hundred-and-twelve patients with acute abdominal diseases, 274 patients with various forms and stages of cancer and 134 patients operated on due to benign diseases, were studied. The biochemical studies included SDS-PAGE, native PAGE and gel filtration for molecular weight determinations, isoelectric focusing and crossed immuno-electrophoresis for electrophoretic mobility studies and Concavalin A and ACA 34 as intermediary gels for possible lectin binding or complexation. Western blot analysis was also used to identify
CRP
. In summary, however, these more elaborate biochemical methods could not disclose any microheterogneity of
CRP
in plasma and thus did not add any diagnostic information to the crude levels.
...
PMID:No microheterogenous changes of plasma C-reactive protein found in man during various diseases. 1046 68
Procarboxypeptidase U (proCPU) is the plasma precursor of carboxypeptidase U (CPU, carboxypeptidase R. plasma carboxypeptidase B or activated thrombin-activatable fibrinolysis inhibitor, TAFIa). CPU removes C-terminal lysine residues that act as plasminogen binding sites from partially degraded fibrin, thereby down-regulating plasminogen activation and fibrinolysis. The present study was carried out as a pilot study to examine whether the plasma proCPU concentration is related to the presence of coronary artery disease (CAD) and/or to levels of established risk indicators for CAD, in a case-control study of 110 men requiring coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) because of stable angina pectoris. The preoperative plasma proCPU level in the CABG patients was significantly higher than in population-based controls (1029 +/- 154 vs. 974 +/- 140 U/L, p <0.05). In addition, in a subset of the patients (n = 31 ) the proCPU concentration, which was significantly lower on the third postoperative day (-17 +/- 10%), had increased significantly on the sixth day (+14 +/- 12%) after surgery, compared with the preoperative level. In both patients and controls, proCPU concentration was strongly and positively associated with factor VII amidolytic activity and
protein C
activity, suggesting a common mechanism modulating the plasma levels of these proteins. Otherwise, statistically significant correlations with proCPU were group-specific. In the patients, proCPU correlated significantly with plasma fibrinogen and protein S. In the controls, proCPU correlated significantly with concentrations of cholesterol in plasma. VLDL and LDL. In addition, proCPU correlated significantly with
C-reactive protein
and haptoglobin levels in the controls only, indicating that also inflammatory mechanisms are involved in the regulation of plasma proCPU. These results suggest that a mechanism exists by which fibrinolytic function is impaired in a manner that is likely to result in more stable fibrin deposits and increase the risk of precocious CAD as well as early occlusion of venous bypass grafts.
...
PMID:Plasma procarboxypeptidase U in men with symptomatic coronary artery disease. 1101 56
Chronic renal failure (CRF) courses with both systemic inflammatory reaction and haemostatic activation. We explored the relationship of these processes with plasma levels of free,
activated protein C
(
APC
) and complexes of
APC
with its inhibitors in patients with CRF under conservative treatment. Plasma concentrations of inflammatory cytokines [tumour necrosis factor alpha (TNFalpha) and interleukin 8], acute-phase proteins (
C-reactive protein
, fibrinogen, alpha1-anti-trypsin and von Willebrand factor), and markers of haemostatic activation (thrombin-anti-thrombin complexes, plasmin-anti-plasmin complexes, and fibrin and fibrinogen degradation products) were higher in patients than in controls. Inflammatory and haemostatic markers were significantly and positively correlated. Total plasma
APC
and
APC
:alpha1-anti-trypsin (alpha1AT) complexes were 44% and 75% higher in patients than in controls (P = 0.0001), whereas free
APC
was 20% lower (P < 0.015). No significant difference was observed in
APC
:protein C inhibitor (PCI) complexes between both groups. The free/total
APC
ratio was significantly lower in patients than in controls (P < 0.0001). Total plasma
APC
and
APC
:alpha1AT were positively correlated with activation markers of haemostasis and acute-phase proteins, whereas free
APC
was inversely correlated with plasma levels of creatinine, acute-phase proteins and fibrin degradation products (FnDP). Systemic inflammation and activation of haemostasis are interrelated processes in CRF.
APC
generation was increased in response to elevated thrombin production, but the inflammatory reaction, associated with increased synthesis of alpha1AT, reduced its anticoagulant effect. Lower free plasma
APC
in CRF may be pathogenically associated with atherothrombosis, a major cause of death in this disease.
...
PMID:Increased activation of protein C, but lower plasma levels of free, activated protein C in uraemic patients: relationship with systemic inflammation and haemostatic activation. 1144 82
The effects of hormone replacement therapy (HRT) on thrombosis risk, thrombotic variables, and the inflammatory marker
C-reactive protein
(
CRP
) may vary by route of administration (oral versus transdermal). We studied the relationships of 14 thrombotic variables (previously related to cardiovascular risk) and
CRP
to menopausal status and to use of HRT subtypes in a cross-sectional study of 975 women aged 40-59 years. Our study confirmed previously-reported associations between thrombotic variables and menopausal status. Oral HRT use was associated with increased plasma levels of Factor IX,
activated protein C
(
APC
) resistance, and
CRP
; and with decreased levels of tissue plasminogen activator (t-PA) antigen and plasminogen activator inhibitor (PAI) activity. Factor VII levels were higher in women taking unopposed oral oestrogen HRT. The foregoing associations were not observed in users of transdermal HRT; hence they may be consequences of the "first-pass" effect of oral oestrogens on hepatic protein synthesis. We conclude that different effects of oral and transdermal HRT on thrombotic and inflammatory variables may be relevant to their relative thrombotic risk; and suggest that this hypothesis should be tested in prospective, randomised studies.
...
PMID:Different effects of oral and transdermal hormone replacement therapies on factor IX, APC resistance, t-PA, PAI and C-reactive protein--a cross-sectional population survey. 1152 2
We sought to assess the longitudinal stability of risk factors for atherosclerosis and thrombosis. including several coagulation. fibrinolysis, and inflammation factors, in frozen plasma samples stored at -70 degrees C for months or years. We reviewed data collected on 29 different control pools over periods ranging from 7 to 59 months for two functional assays (factor VII and fibrinogen) and seven antigen measurements (
C-reactive protein
. D-dimer, plasmin-alpha2-antiplasmin complex, plasminogen activator inhibitor-1,
protein C
, protein S, and tissue plasminogen activator), totaling more than 15,000 data points. Screening of the data using least squares regression revealed only sporadic associations between monthly means and time, with no consistent trends. Analysis by repeated measures and summary measure methods revealed no evidence of sample degradation over time for the factors studied. Our finding of longitudinal stability in the biochemical properties of frozen plasma strengthens the presumption of sample stability on which molecular epidemiologic studies are based.
...
PMID:Longitudinal stability of coagulation, fibrinolysis, and inflammation factors in stored plasma samples. 1177 19
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>