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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (
diabetes
)
277,896
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The authors define pro-thrombotic states as conditions associated with a high frequency of thrombosis; this association is based on pathogenetic or simply clinical and epidemiological relationships. Thrombophilic states have well-defined, specific causes: antithrombin III, protein C and S and similar deficiencies for inherited thrombophilias, and lupus anticoagulant, antiphospholipid antibodies for the acquired forms. Another identifiable group is made up of several conditions predisposing to thrombosis (CPT) characterized by less specific and multiple mechanisms (e.g. malignancy, inflammatory bowel disease, nephrotic syndrome,
diabetes
, obesity, etc.). These conditions may induce thrombosis by themselves or contribute to its clinical onset in patients with true thrombophilic states. This is especially the case for patients who are taking contraceptive drugs, are pregnant, have undergone surgery or trauma. The term hypercoagulability states is by no means equivalent to either thrombophilia or CPT. In fact, hypercoagulability may be defined as "activation of blood coagulation" in the presence of specific markers such as fibrinopeptide A and prothrombin fragment F1 + 2.
Hypercoagulability
is therefore a laboratory rather than a clinical condition and can be a transient feature appearing during certain phases of thrombophilia or CPT. Lastly, conditions involving the presence of hemostatic risk factors for atherothrombosis are simply terms used to describe a statistical-epidemiological relationship between certain hemostatic variables (fibrinogen, factor VII, PAI, etc.) involving the risk of cardiovascular morbidity and mortality but not necessarily indicating a hypercoagulability state.
...
PMID:Pro-thrombotic states and their diagnosis. 800 87
A retrospective community-wide survey identified 109 patients younger than 40 years of age with lower extremity ischemia: 72 men and 37 women, mean age 36 years (range 25 to 40 years), black-to-white ratio-1:1. Initially, 66 patients had claudication and 43 had severe ischemia. Cardiovascular risk factors were smoking (85%), hypertension (47%), coronary artery disease (30%), hyperlipidemia (27%),
diabetes
(25%), and visceral arteriopathy (17%). Unique risk factors included hypercoagulability (15%) and clinical arterial hypoplasia (15%). Twenty-three (21%) patients were treated medically; 74 (68%) underwent primary revascularization and 12 (11%) primary major limb amputation. Forty-six (53%) patients required secondary procedures, of which 34 (74%) were performed within 1 year of primary intervention. A total of 29 (27%) patients ultimately required amputation (10 bilateral). Women had higher prevalence of
diabetes
(p < 0.01), arterial hypoplasia (p < 0.05), and tendency for more severe ischemia (p = 0.11). No racial differences in severity of symptoms or outcome of treatment were found. By multiple logistic regression analysis, typical cardiovascular risk factors did not predict severity of symptoms, need for surgical treatment, or outcome. However,
diabetes
was associated with tissue loss (p < 0.05) and primary amputation (p < 0.001). Further, adjusted odds ratios indicate that arterial hypoplasia had a protective effect on distal vasculature (p < 0.05) and predicting need for revascularization (p < 0.05), but not on treatment failure.
Hypercoagulability
had the highest predictive value for presence of severe ischemia (p < 0.05), need for primary amputation (p < 0.01), and early failure of surgical treatment (p < 0.05).
...
PMID:Lower extremity ischemia in adults younger than forty years of age: a community-wide survey of premature atherosclerotic arterial disease. 817 42
Hypercoagulability
is a condition where as a result of certain pathological changes in the blood inadequate cumulation of thrombocytes or fibrin occurs which finally can lead to arterial or venous thrombosis, depending on vascular wall damage. In the submitted review the authors analyze the most important inborn and acquired causes of hypercoagulation states. As to inborn causes, deficiens of natural anticoagulation proteins (antithrombin III, protein C, protein S) are most important as well as dysfibrinogenaemia, impaired fibrinolysis associated with deficiency of natural activators of fibrinolysis or increased activity of their inhibitors and homocystinuria. The most frequent acquired causes of hypercoagulation states are the presence of anticardiolipin antibodies ("lupus anticoagulans"), pregnancy, the use of oral contraceptives, malignity, nephrotic syndrome, postoperative conditions,
diabetes mellitus
and some other diseases.
...
PMID:[Hypercoagulation states]. 828 11
Hypercoagulability
with resultant thrombosis as a leading cause of death remains unproven due to the lack of a global screening coagulation test documenting antecedent hypercoagulability. To fill this need a modified recalcification time (MRT) test that incorporates the contribution of all the circulating cellular and chemical mediators, including the important but neglected tissue factor, to coagulation is described. Aliquots of blood are incubated with saline and with endotoxin, and the MRT is instrumentally determined. Values outside the normal ranges of 5.3 to 8.5 minutes (saline) and 4.5 to 7.5 minutes (endotoxin) in the coagulation spectrum of 0 to 10 minutes to infinity are abnormal. Shorter values are inversely related to the degree of hypercoagulability. To assess MRT in detecting hypercoagulability, MRT values in conditions with known thrombotic risk that were reported individually are presented by indicating the percentages of each in the abnormal ranges. The conditions, all with statistically significant hypercoagulability, included early breast cancer,
diabetes
, head, neck, and colon cancer, peripheral vascular disease, and pregnancy. Modified recalcification time meets the criteria of a global coagulation screening test because of: 1) age-related prevalence of asymptomatic cancer and thrombotic cardiovascular disease, 2) specificity and sensitivity, and 3) expected lower morbidity and mortality with early intervention.
...
PMID:Modified recalcification time: a global coagulation screening test. 837 Dec 83
Hyperinsulinemia is associated with the development of coronary heart disease. However, the underlying mechanisms are still poorly understood.
Hypercoagulability
and impaired fibrinolysis are possible candidates linking hyperinsulinism with atherosclerotic disease, and it has been suggested that proinsulin rather than insulin is the crucial pathophysiological agent. The aim of this study was to investigate the relationship of insulin and its precursors to markers of coagulation and fibrinolysis in a large triethnic population. A strong and independent relationship between plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (PAI-1) antigen and insulin and its precursors (proinsulin, 32-33 split proinsulin) was found consistently across varying states of glucose tolerance (PAI-1 versus fasting insulin [proinsulin], r=0.38 [r=0.34] in normal glucose tolerance; r=0.42 [r=0.43] in impaired glucose tolerance; and r=0.38 [r=0.26] in type 2 diabetes; all P<0.001). The relationship remained highly significant even after accounting for insulin sensitivity as measured by a frequently sampled intravenous glucose tolerance test. In a stepwise multiple regression model after adjusting for age, sex, ethnicity, and clinic, both insulin and its precursors were significantly associated with PAI-1 levels. The relationship between fibrinogen and insulin and its precursors was significant in the overall population (r=0.20 for insulin and proinsulin; each P<0.001) but showed a more inconsistent pattern in subgroup analysis and after adjustments for demographic and metabolic variables. Stepwise multiple regression analysis showed that proinsulin (split products) but not fasting insulin significantly contributed to fibrinogen levels after adjustment for age, sex, clinic, and ethnicity. Decreased insulin sensitivity was independently associated with higher PAI-1 and fibrinogen levels. In summary, we were able to demonstrate an independent relationship of 2 crucial factors of hemostasis, fibrinogen and PAI-1, to insulin and its precursors. These findings may have important clinical implications in the risk assessment and prevention of macrovascular disease, not only in patients with overt
diabetes
but also in nondiabetic subjects who are hyperinsulinemic.
...
PMID:Relative contribution of insulin and its precursors to fibrinogen and PAI-1 in a large population with different states of glucose tolerance. The Insulin Resistance Atherosclerosis Study (IRAS). 1007 58
Thrombophilia
is now considered a multicausal disease, with an interplay of acquired and genetic risk factors. Recent studies have shown that patients with the 20210 A prothrombin mutation display remarkably similar characteristics compared with patients with Factor V Leiden mutation. It is evident that neither the Factor V Leiden mutation nor the 20210 A prothrombin mutation is a major risk factor for myocardial infarction or stroke, unless accompanied by other classical risk factors, including
diabetes mellitus
, hypertension and smoking. Finally, the homozygous form of the thermolabile methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase gene, although leading to elevated homocysteine levels, seems not to represent a genetic risk factor for venous thrombosis.
...
PMID:Thrombophilia. 1046 43
Thrombophilia
with a contemporary reduction of fibrinolytic activity has been observed both in
diabetes mellitus
and hypertension. Previously, we found a relationship between plasminogen activator inhibitor Type 1 (PAI-1) and lipoprotein(a) [Lp(a)] in Type 2 diabetes mellitus patients without complications. We hypothesised that this relationship could be due to a compensatory mechanism able to lower the risk of hypofibrinolysis as found in Type 2 diabetes mellitus. The present work was aimed at investigating the influence of concurrent hypertension and
diabetes mellitus
on the plasma levels of these two fibrinolytic inhibitors. In addition, other risk factors, known to influence the fibrinolytic parameters, were taken into account. Forty-nine Type 2 nonhypertensive diabetic patients without complications, 47 Type 2 hypertensive diabetic patients without complications, 54 non-diabetic hypertensive subjects without complications as well as 87 control subjects were studied. Plasma concentrations of Lp(a), PAI-1 antigen and activity, and the main parameters of oxidative, lipo- and glycometabolic balance were determined. Significant statistical differences between diabetic and non-diabetic subjects were found concerning triglycerides and antioxidant defence (p<0.01). Analysis of variance showed the F test statistically significant in evaluating the Log PAI-1/Lp(a) (p = 0.02). Correlation analysis between Log PAI-1 antigen and Lp(a) was significant in non-hypertensive diabetic patients, as expected (r = -0.38, p<0.01), and even stronger in hypertensive diabetic patients (r = -O.72,p<0.01). These results allow to hypothesise that the relationship between PAI-1/Lp(a) could be determinant in avoiding vascular complications due to
diabetes mellitus
and hypertension.
Diabetes
Nutr Metab 1999 Dec
PMID:A strong inverse relationship between PAI-1 and Lp(a) in hypertensive Type 2 diabetic patients. 1078 61
The major side effects due to estrogens in oral contraceptives are summarized, (thromboembolism, hypertension,
diabetes
, lipid metabolism, liver function) 2 retrospective studies on thromboembolism are reviewed. Estrogens decrease bile flux in the liver, which can become manifest as jaundice or pruritus, and may be the cause of abnormal synthesis of proteins by the liver. Glucose tolerance decreases and insulinemia rises in 30% of users after 2 years and in 80% after 5 years, often revealing latent
diabetes
or causing obesity. Plasma fatty acids and triglycerides increase, and in the predisposed, hyperlipidemia may appear.
Hypercoagulability
results from increased synthesis of clotting factors by the liver and thromboembolism may become more likely because of hypertension, obesity and lesions in the veins. Hypertension seems due to increased output of angiotensinogen by the liver and aldosterone by the adrenal. A British retrospective study on less than 10% of known thromboembolism cases implicates estrogen doses above 50 mcg, but found several contradictions.
...
PMID:[Are estrogens responsible for incidents observed under combined estrogen-progestagen treatment?]. 1230 14
Patients with end-stage renal disease dialyzed due to diabetic nephropathy are at higher risk of death due to cardiovascular complications than dialyzed non-diabetic patients. Disturbances in hemostasis may play a role in the vascular complications of
diabetes mellitus
. It has been postulated that TAFI-Thrombin Activatable Fibrinolysis Inhibitor, newly described glycoprotein, couples two opposite systems: coagulation and fibrinolysis. The aim of the work was to study TAFI concentration in hemodialyzed and peritoneally dialyzed diabetic and non-diabetic patients. We assessed: TAFI concentration, markers of ongoing coagulation: thrombin-antithrombin complexes, prothrombin fragments 1 + 2 (markers of TAFI activation), a marker of ongoing fibrinolysis: plasmin-antiplasmin complexes, a marker of TAFI cataliser to TAFIa-thrombomodulin using commercially available kits. All four groups studied did not differ in regard to fibrinogen, thrombomodulin, plasmin-antiplasmin complexes, and TAFI concentration. Both groups of dialyzed diabetic patients have higher concentration of markers of ongoing coagulation when compared to dialyzed non-diabetic patients.
Hypercoagulable state
observed in dialyzed diabetic patients may contribute to the higher cardiovascular mortality in these population.
...
PMID:[Thrombin activatable fibrinolysis o inhibitor-TAFI- in dialyzed patients with diabetic nephropathy]. 1468 22
Patients dialyzed due to diabetic nephropathy are at a higher risk of death due to cardiovascular complications than dialyzed non-diabetic patients. Disturbances in hemostasis may play a role in the vascular complications of
diabetes mellitus
. It has been postulated that TAFI-thrombin activatable fibrinolysis inhibitor, which couples two opposite systems: coagulation and fibrinolysis, may be involved in the mechanism of vascular endothelial damage in diabetic patients. We assessed: TAFI and TAFIa, markers of ongoing coagulation: thrombin-antithrombin complexes, prothrombin fragments 1+2, a marker of ongoing fibrinolysis: plasmin-antiplasmin complexes in diabetic and non-diabetic patients on hemodialyses-HD, peritoneal dialyses-CAPD, patients with chronic renal failure with and without diabetic nephropathy on conservative treatment. Both groups of dialyzed diabetic patients have a higher concentration of markers of ongoing coagulation and TAFI activity when compared to dialyzed non-diabetic patients. Linear regression analysis showed that TAFI concentration was directly related to albumin in HD and CAPD patients without diabetic nephropathy, whereas TAFIa correlated with triglycerides, fibrinogen and leukocytes count in this group. When evaluated separately (HD, CAPD), significant correlations between TAFIa and triglycerides and fibrinogen were found only in diabetic CAPD patients. Multivariate analysis showed no correlation between TAFI and other parameters studied. In conclusion, elevated circulating TAFI and TAFIa might be a new link in the pathogenesis of impaired fibrinolysis in diabetic nephropathy, and thus atherosclerosis progression, particularly in CAPD patients.
Hypercoagulable state
observed in diabetic patients on conservative treatment and maintained on dialyses may contribute to the higher cardiovascular mortality in this population. In these patients there is also evidence of endothelial injury, and probably secondary activation of the coagulation cascade.
...
PMID:Thrombin activatable fibrinolysis inhibitor (TAFI) and markers of endothelial cell injury in dialyzed patients with diabetic nephropathy. 1498 23
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