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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (diabetes)
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To study the possible role of an "increased thrombotic tendency" in the vascular complications of diabetes several tests of haemostatic function were carried out on 91 men and 63 women with diabetes aged 35-54 years and the results compared with findings in 686 men and 393 women of the same age in the Northwick Park Heart Study. Mean values for factors VII and X, fibrinogen, and platelet adhesiveness were higher in the diabetics, but mean fibrinolytic activity and whole blood platelet counts were lower. Antithrombin III values were also higher in the diabetics, which may have constituted a protective response to other changes favouring the onset of vascular disease. Diabetics with retinopathy had higher factor VII and antithrombin III values, and those with proteinuria had higher values for factor VII, fibrinogen, and platelet adhesiveness than those without these complications. These findings suggest a potentially important association between a thrombogenic tendency and vascular disease in diabetes. Nevertheless, prospective data are needed to clarify whether the haemostatic abnormalities precede the onset of clinically manifest vascular complications or are a consequence of them.
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PMID:Haemostatic variables associated with diabetes and its complications. 50 77

The main role of thrombosis in the acute coronary event is now well documented. Numerous hemostatic factors are involved in thrombosis. Among them, fibrinogen, factor VII, leucocytes and platelets have been shown by epidemiology, to be closely related to the acute coronary event. The key role seems to be reserved to platelets since the close relationship of their activity as evaluated by platelet aggregation tests, to both coronary episodes and the main risk factors such as smoking, diabetes and dietary habits, has been recently demonstrated. In addition, the role of platelets has been confirmed by the marked protective effect against coronary events, of drugs such as aspirin, inhibiting platelet aggregation.
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PMID:[Hemostatic anomalies and coronary risk]. 129 35

To study factor VII (F VII) hyperactivity in chronic dialysis patients, we measured the plasma levels of F VII activity (F VII c) and antigen (F VII Ag), prothrombin activation fragments 1 + 2 (F1 + 2), thrombin-antithrombin III complexes (TAT), and thrombomodulin in 28 patients on hemodialysis. Marked elevation of F VII c was found in long-term dialysis patients (185 +/- 30%). This hyperactivity was accompanied by both elevation of the F VII Ag level (153 +/- 28%) and enhanced activation of F VII zymogen, expressed as the F VII c/F VII Ag ratio (1.23 +/- 0.23), but pseudocholinesterase activity was decreased. The 6 patients with ischemic heart disease had slightly higher F VII c (200 +/- 25%) than those without ischemic heart disease (181 +/- 30%), although the difference was not significant. Increased F VII c was accompanied by factor Xa hyperactivity (a high plasma F1 + 2 level) in the long-term dialysis patients, but there was no significant elevation of plasma TAT levels when compared with controls matched for age, sex, and the presence or absence of diabetes mellitus. Plasma TAT levels were significantly correlated with plasma thrombomodulin levels, suggesting that thrombin generation in blood as a result of hemodialysis could induce systemic endothelial cell injury.
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PMID:Factor VII hyperactivity in chronic dialysis patients. 133 12

The importance of the thrombotic component of coronary heart disease is increasingly recognised, and in particular the role of the coagulation system in this process. The Northwick Park Heart study was the first major prospective study to identify both fibrinogen and factor VIIc as risk factors, as powerful as total cholesterol in predicting ischaemic events. Since then, a number of epidemiological studies have confirmed the importance of fibrinogen, not just in CHD but in stroke as well. A variety of environmental factors are known to influence levels of factor VII and fibrinogen and therefore support their role in the development of coronary thrombosis. Both are known to increase with age and body weight and are relatively elevated in diabetes. Fibrinogen is strongly related to smoking habit and a substantial proportion of the IHD risk associated with smoking is mediated through this relationship. There is a dose response effect between number of cigarettes smoked and level of fibrinogen and an inverse relationship with time since cessation of the habit. Factor VII is known to correlate with total cholesterol level, and there is a relationship between dietary variability of fat intake and factor VII, which is likely to play an important role in the risk of CHD. The case for using either anticoagulation or anti platelet agents in secondary prevention of myocardial infarction is now clear, but there are still uncertainties in primary prevention which relate to the ideal dose intensity of either aspirin or anti-coagulation and the type of patient most likely to benefit. The ongoing Thrombosis Prevention Trial identifies middle-aged males at high risk of a myocardial infarction.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Plasma fibrinogen and factor VII as risk factors for cardiovascular disease. 150 57

The Progetto Lombardo Atero-Trombosi (PLAT) Study was a prospective, multicenter, multidisciplinary study of the association among hemostatic variables, conventional risk factors, and atherothrombotic events in four groups of patients with preexisting vascular ischemic disease (335 myocardial infarction survivors, 123 patients with stable angina pectoris, 160 with transient ischemic attacks, and 335 with peripheral vascular disease). In the myocardial infarction group, univariate analysis showed that atherothrombotic events were associated with high fibrinogen (p = 0.001), factor VIII:C (p less than 0.001), and von Willebrand factor antigen (vWF:Ag) (p = 0.004) levels and with low high density lipoprotein cholesterol (p = 0.043), factor VII (p = 0.019), and protein C (p = 0.044) levels; multivariate analysis produced associations with high fibrinogen and factor VIII:C levels and low protein C levels. By both univariate and multivariate analysis, events in the angina pectoris group were associated with high vWF:Ag (p = 0.026) and leukocyte (p = 0.033) levels and the presence of carotid arterial stenosis (p = 0.063); associations with high leukocyte (p = 0.037) and factor VIII:C (p = 0.186) levels, family history (p = 0.031), and diabetes (p = 0.061) were also found in the group with transient ischemic attacks. In those with peripheral vascular disease, events were associated with Fontaine stage greater than or equal to IIB (p = 0.024), high factor VIII:C levels (p = 0.073), and low protein C (p = 0.028), fibrinogen (p = 0.030), antithrombin III (p = 0.054), and factor VII (p = 0.057) levels by univariate analysis and with Fontaine stage and low fibrinogen levels by multivariate analysis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:The PLAT Study: hemostatic function in relation to atherothrombotic ischemic events in vascular disease patients. Principal results. PLAT Study Group. Progetto Lombardo Atero-Trombosi (PLAT) Study Group. 152 21

The aim of the study was to evaluate the direct influence of lipid parameters (total and HDL-cholesterol, triglycerides and total lipids) on the rheologic-coagulative pattern. We studied blood rheological properties--blood (BV), plasmatic (PV), and seric (SV) viscosity, whole blood (WBF) and red cell (RCF) filterability--and some coagulative factors--fibrinogen (Fib), levels of clotting factor VII (fVIIc) and VIII (fVIIIc) activity--in 156 men aged 40-54 years; 87 patients had type II hyperlipoproteinemia (46 type IIa and 41 type IIb) and 69 were normolipemic controls. Smokers, patients with arterial hypertension, diabetes mellitus or cardiovascular clinical manifestations were excluded. Type IIb hyperlipoproteinemic patients had increased blood viscosity (shear rate 225 sec-1, p. less than 0.01), which was positively correlated with triglycerides and fibrinogen concentration. Levels of fibrinogen, fVIIc and fVIIIc activity did not differ significantly in hyperlipemic patients and controls, although fVIIc activity and fibrinogen were both positively related with lipid parameters. These data suggest that, in absence of other major risk factors, the alterations of the rheologic-coagulative pattern are mainly dependent on the severity of the lipid disorder.
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PMID:[The relationships between the lipoprotein profile and rheological-coagulation parameters in patients with hyperlipoproteinemia type II]. 162 10

Of the major risk factors for atherosclerosis, high factor VII and fibrinogen levels, genetic predisposition, gender and age cannot be influenced. Reduction of high blood pressure reduces the cerebral but not the coronary vascular risk and correction of dyslipidaemia correlates with cardiovascular risk. Other major risk factors (tobacco consumption, obesity, sedentary lifestyle and diabetes) can also be modified. Aspirin in doses of approximately 300 mg/day may be recommended for the primary prevention of myocardial infarction (MI), but only in those patients with a moderate to high risk of cardiovascular disease. Aspirin reduces the risk of fatal and nonfatal MI by about 50% and also decreases the overall mortality rate among patients with unstable angina. A lower dose of aspirin (150 mg/day) also reduces mortality by 23% in the acute phase of MI. In doses of 300 mg/day, aspirin is useful in the secondary prevention of MI and reduces the overall mortality rate by 15%. Various antiplatelet agents, including aspirin (alone or combined with dipyridamole) and ticlopidine, have proved useful in the prevention of thrombosis in aorto-coronary grafts, provided treatment begins at the latest 6 hours after surgery. The usefulness of antiplatelet drugs has been well established in the prevention of immediate reocclusion following coronary angioplasty, but not in the prevention of late reocclusion. Aspirin and ticlopidine are also beneficial in extracorporeal circulation techniques. In patients with a synthetic cardiac valve prosthesis, antivitamin K-anticoagulants are still indispensable lifelong, but their antithrombotic effect can be reinforced by dipyridamole or aspirin. Diuretics probably provide the best primary protection against cerebrovascular accidents, although medium doses of aspirin may be considered in elderly people at high risk of such accidents. Aspirin (alone or combined with dipyridamole) and ticlopidine may be recommended for the secondary prevention of cerebral ischaemic accidents. Aspirin (with or without dipyridamole) and ticlopidine reinforce the treatment of obliterative arterial disease in the lower limbs.
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PMID:Risk factors, interventions and therapeutic agents in the prevention of atherosclerosis-related ischaemic diseases. 172 14

Recent prospective investigations have reported that higher plasma fibrinogen concentrations and higher factor VII coagulant activity are associated with greater risk of cardiovascular disease. To discover what characteristics may influence fibrinogen and factor VII, we analyzed data from the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities Study obtained from over 12,000 men and women, aged 45-64 years, from four communities in December 1986 to June 1989. Fibrinogen was higher in blacks than whites and in women than men; in general, it increased with age, smoking, body size, diabetes, fasting serum insulin, LDL cholesterol, lipoprotein(a), leukocyte count, and menopause, and it decreased with ethanol intake, physical activity, HDL cholesterol, and female hormone use. Factor VII was higher in women than men and, in women, increased with age; in both sexes, it increased with body size, triglycerides, LDL cholesterol, and HDL cholesterol, and it decreased with ethanol intake. These findings indicate that elevations in fibrinogen and factor VII may be modifiable through appropriate lifestyle changes.
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PMID:Population correlates of plasma fibrinogen and factor VII, putative cardiovascular risk factors. 178 4

The aim of this study was to evaluate the effects of a fish oil preparation (MaxEPA) on hemostatic function and fasting lipid and glucose levels in non-insulin-dependent diabetic (NIDDM) subjects. Eighty NIDDM outpatients aged 55.9 yr (mean SD 11.5 yr) participated in a prospective double-blind placebo-controlled study of MaxEPA capsules (10 g/day) or olive oil (control) treatment over 6 wk. Patients received either MaxEPA or olive oil in addition to preexisting therapy. Metabolic and hemostatic variables were measured before treatment and after 3 and 6 wk. Platelet membrane eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) content increased in the treatment group (P less than 0.001). MaxEPA supplementation was associated with a significant fall in total triglycerides (P less than 0.001) but did not affect total cholesterol (P = 0.7) compared with control treatment. Fasting plasma glucose increased after 3 wk (P = 0.01) but not after 6 wk (P = 0.17) treatment with MaxEPA. Spontaneous platelet aggregation in whole blood fell in the MaxEPA group (P less than 0.02) after 6 wk, but there were no changes in agonist-induced platelet aggregation, thromboxane generation in platelet-rich plasma, or plasma beta-thromboglobulin and platelet factor IV levels. An increase in clotting factor VII (P = 0.02), without changes in fibrinogen or factor X levels, occurred in the MaxEPA group. Similar reductions in blood pressure were observed in both groups. Dietary supplementation with MaxEPA capsules (10 g/day) in NIDDM subjects is associated with improvement in hypertriglyceridemia but with deleterious effects in factor VII and blood glucose levels. Most indices of platelet function are unaffected by this therapy.
Diabetes Care 1990 Aug
PMID:Effects of fish oil supplements in NIDDM subjects. Controlled study. 220 15

We investigated whether or not obesity is related to increased factor VII activity. We studied 70 obese subjects (aged 25 to 50 years, 25 males and 45 females, body mass index (BMI): mean +/- SD = 32.44 +/- 5.44) and 33 non-obese subjects (aged 25 to 50 years, 12 males and 21 females, BMI: mean +/- SD = 21.80 +/- 1.70). None of them were smokers or affected by hyperlipidemia, diabetes mellitus, impaired glucose tolerance or arterial hypertension. Factor VII activity was measured by the coagulometric method. We found higher factor VII activity in obese subjects (115.74 +/- 26.10%) than in healthy subjects (98.55 +/- 23.49%, p less than 0.005). Increased factor VII levels could determine a thrombophilic state involved in the genesis of cardiovascular accidents in obesity.
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PMID:[Factor VII and cardiovascular risk in obese subjects]. 224 59


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