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Query: UMLS:C0018681 (
headache
)
56,091
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
It has been suggested that during attacks of migraine both platelet activation and plasma coagulability are increased. We investigated the prevalence of several prothrombotic genetic risk factors in patients with migraine:
factor V
R/Q 506, factor II 20210 G/A, decanucleotide insertion/deletion in the factor VII promoter, and the platelet HPA-1 and HPA-2 alloantigenic systems, by genotypic identification in an age- and sex-matched case-control study including 106 patients with migraine (49 with aura, and 57 without aura). The prevalence of all genotypes was similar among case patients and controls. No association in relation to the type of migraine was detected in the factor II, factor VII, HPA-1, or HPA-2 polymorphisms. Our results showed a high prevalence of factor V Leiden in those patients with migraine with aura (6.1%), though that association was not statistically significant. The studied prothrombotic genetic factors do not seem to be associated with the development of migraine and, therefore, are not likely relevant in the previously reported hypercoagulability and platelet hyperaggregability in this disease.
Cephalalgia
1998 Jun
PMID:Migraine and prothrombotic genetic risk factors. 967 4
Migraine, particularly migraine with aura (MA), may be a risk factor for ischemic stroke (IS). The reasons for this association are unknown. We investigated the presence of genetic abnormalities of the protein C system in 83 MA patients, 31 IS patients, and 124 healthy controls, all aged under 45 years. We found an increased frequency of activated protein C resistance due to Arg506Gln
factor V
mutation, and of protein S deficiency in both disorders, with figures higher than those reported in the general population and significantly different from those found in controls. These prothrombotic genetic abnormalities may be shared risk factors in IS and MA, and may play a role in increasing the risk of cerebrovascular disease in migraineurs.
Cephalalgia
1998 Nov
PMID:Genetic abnormalities of the protein C system: shared risk factors in young adults with migraine with aura and with ischemic stroke? 987 85
Patients with migraine are known to be at risk for stroke. It has been reported that in a group of patients with cerebral ischemia and the Leiden mutation of
factor V
, 67% had classical migraine. We have studied the frequency of this mutation in a group of Italian children and adolescents affected by migraine with aura. The Leiden mutation was detected in 2 (3.5%) of 57 patients and in 8 (3.7%) of 219 controls. The 2 patients carrying the mutation had no peculiar characteristics as compared with the rest of the migrainous population. In our study, the frequency of the Leiden mutation in patients was not different from that of controls. These data contrast with those collected in the Finnish population and in a group of northwestern Italian adult patients, but agree with results previously reported from The Netherlands.
Headache
PMID:Frequency of factor V Leiden in juvenile migraine with aura. 1127 3
The role of hemostatic elements in stroke has been clearly defined but several prothrombotic polymorphisms of hemostatic factors, important for other thromboembolic disorders, seem not to be very significant in stroke. Recently, the high prevalence of factor V Leiden in patients with stroke and a history of migraine has suggested an association between migraine and prothrombotic genetic risk factors. Stroke being a multifactorial disease, the aim of this study was to test whether prothrombotic tendencies increase the risk of stroke in patients with migraine. We determined the prevalence of four prothrombotic genetic risk factors (
factor V
R/Q 506, factor II 20210 G/A, decanucleotide insertion/deletion in the factor VII promoter, and the platelet HPA-1 alloantigen system) in 17 patients with coexisting ischemic cerebrovascular disease and migraine, 107 patients with ischemic cerebrovascular disease, 106 patients with migraine, and 202 control subjects. Genotyping for all polymorphisms analyzed in our study were performed after specific genomic polymerase chain reaction, and confirmed by single-strain conformation polymorphism analysis. In the group of patients with coexisting ischemic cerebrovascular disease and migraine, the prevalence of prothrombotic genotypes (factor V Leiden, 5.8%; factor II 20210 A, 0%; factor VII A1, 70.6%; and HPA-1b, 35.3%) was similar to that obtained in all other groups. We can conclude that the studied polymorphisms do not seem to be associated with the development of ischemic cerebrovascular disease in those patients with migraine.
Headache
PMID:Prothrombotic genetic risk factors in patients with coexisting migraine and ischemic cerebrovascular disease. 1127 32
Hereditary hypercoagulability has been identified as risk factor in approximately 30% of cerebral venous thrombosis cases. We report three females with this association. A 38 years old female with a history of deep venous thrombosis of the lower limb, presented with
headache
, vomiting and a generalized seizure. Magnetic resonance angiography showed a partial thrombosis of the left lateral and superior longitudinal venous sinuses. Coagulation study showed a resistance to activated C protein and
factor V
Leyden. A 42 years old woman with a history of deep venous thrombosis, presented a right hemiplegia during a hospitalization. Magnetic resonance showed a left lateral hemorrhagic infarction. Magnetic resonance angiography showed an absence of signal in three venous sinuses. Coagulation study showed a protein C deficiency. A 17 years old woman presented a right hemiparesis in the sixth day of puerperium. CAT scan showed a left frontoparietal subcortical venous infarction. Coagulation study showed an antithrombin III deficiency.
...
PMID:[Status of hereditary hypercoagulability and cerebral venous thrombosis. Report of 3 cases]. 1196 66
Cerebral venous thrombosis (CVT) may present with a variety of symptoms and findings consisting of either only persistent
headache
, or slowly progressive stroke over several days, or even coma. CVT may develop in relation to hypercoagulable states. However, even after extensive investigation, a predisposing factor could not be identified in some cases. We report a case of CVT associated with heterozygous V Leiden mutation and sarcoidosis. Since most
factor V
gene heterozygous individuals do not exhibit clinical thrombotic events, the venous thrombosis of our patient suggests convergence of an inherited predisposition (heterozygous factor V Leiden mutation) with an acquired thrombogenic stimulus (sarcoidosis). Early diagnosis and treatment with anticoagulation is pivotal for a favorable outcome.
...
PMID:Cerebral venous thrombosis in a patient with sarcoidosis. 1942 Aug 21
Cerebral venous thrombosis (CVT) is a rare disease. It has numerous and complex etiologies. Inherited or acquired prothrombotic states play a key role in the development of this disease, such as
factor V
G1691A mutation (FV Leiden). A 15-year-old girl presented to the Department of Neurology with a complaint of severe
headache
with visual blurring. The diagnosis of CVT was not initially suspected because of the patient's condition on presentation. An MRI showed thrombosis in the superior sagittal sinus, confirming venous stroke. Anticardiolipin and antiphospholipid antibodies were assessed. In addition, inherited prothrombotic defects, such as protein C, protein S, and antithrombin deficiencies, and genetic mutations for FV Leiden, prothrombin gene G20210A (FII G20210A), and methyltetrahydrofolate reductase C677T (MTHFR C677T) were studied. All results were unremarkable except for the unique homozygous FV Leiden mutation, which likely contributed to this prothrombotic situation. This study highlights the fact that FV Leiden may play a significant role in the onset of CVT in young patients.
...
PMID:Cerebral venous thrombosis associated with homozygous factor V Leiden mutation in a 15-year-old girl of Tunisian origin. 2204 15