Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0019087 (hemorrhagic diathesis)
678 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A 10-year-old boy had a severe lifelong hemorrhagic disorder that had necessitated more than 50 hospitalizations. Laboratory examination showed prolonged bleeding, clotting, partial thromboplastin, prothrombin, and thrombin times. These findings were due to a potent inhibitor of the thrombin-fibrinogen reaction. This inhibitor was similar to heparin in that it acted immediately and did not interfere with the coagulant activities of certain venoms. It differed from heparin in not being adsorbed to barium citrate or neutralized by protamine sulfate. The inhibitory effect was found in the alpha1-globulin fraction. It was identified immunologically and functionally as a double-banded alpha1-antitrypsin of a previously unreported phenotype. The inhibitory effects were depressed by trypsin and heterologous anti-alpha1-antitrypsin.
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PMID:Antithrombin Pittsburgh: an alpha1-antitrypsin variant causing hemorrhagic disease. 41 31

1. Activated factor XIII is the enzyme that covalently cross-links fibrin monomers into fibrin polymers and results in increased clot strength and resistance of the clot to fibrinolysis. 2. Small amounts (greater than 1% of normal) of factor XIII are necessary for normal in vitro and in vivo activity. 3. Factor XIII deficiency is a rare autosomal recessive illness in which a hemorrhagic diathesis is caused by the virtual absence of the active a subunit of factor XIII. Approximately 100 cases have been described. 4. The disease in homozygotes is characterized by umbilical stump bleeding, a high incidence of fetal wastage, delayed soft tissue hemorrhage, and a high incidence of intracranial bleeding. The heterozygote is asymptomatic. 5. This paper calls attention to the apparent high incidence of oligospermia and small testes seen in homozygote males. Otherwise secondary sex characterics are normal. 6. Because there is no abnormality in thrombin generation and conversion of fibrinogen to fibrin, route coagulation tests (prothrombin time, partial thromboplastin time, thrombin time, etc.) are normal. Platelet function tests are normal. 7. Clots made from recalcified plasma severely deficient in factor XIII are soluble in 5 M urea or 1% monochloroacetic acid. These screening tests are simple and nearly pathognomonic of the illness. 8. More sophisticated and quantitative tests (e.g., dansylcadaverine incorporation) are available for definitive diagnosis and heterozygote detection. 9. Replacement treatment of the illness is simple, effective, and relatively inexpensive. Due to the long half-life of infused factor XIII and the small amounts necessary for normal hemostasis, prophylaxis is feasible and encouraged.
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PMID:Factor XIII. 51 66

An outbreak of chronic liver disease was investigated in a kennel of dogs. Anorexia, depression, polyuria, polydipsia, icterus and a terminal hemorrhagic diathesis were noted in clinically affected dogs. Thrombocytopenia, hypofibrinogenemia, elevated fibrinogen degradation products and prolonged activated partial thrombosplastin times (PTT) and one-stage prothrombin times (PT) were associated with the hemorrhagic crisis. Aflatoxicosis was confirmed by the presence of significant levels of aflatoxicosis was confirmed by the presence of significant levels of aflatoxin B in the commercial dog food being fed. A subacute hepatitis was found on necropsy. Disseminated intravascular coagulation was suspected as the cause of the hemorrhage in these cases and treatment was instituted.
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PMID:Disseminated intravascular coagulation complicating aflatoxicosis in dogs. 55 87

Fibrinolysis and disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) have been implicated as the cause or contributing mechanisms for hemorrhage during and after cardiopulmonary bypass. Even when unassociated with hemorrhage, both processes have been thought to be common occurences during open heart surgery. In order to measure the degree to which these mechanisms occur, fibrin split products (FSP) were measured simultaneously in blood and chest tube drainage of open heart surgical patients. In addition, serial measurements of platelets and fibrinogen were also measured in the blood of these patients. It is concluded that fibrinolysis invariably occurs to a high degree in the chest postoperatively but with few systemic manifestations and that fibrinolysis and/or DIC are rare causes of a hemorrhagic diathesis after cardiopulmonary bypass.
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PMID:Fibrinolysis and disseminated intravascular coagulation in open heart sergery. 98 39

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".
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PMID:Bleeding in uremic patients after carbenicillin. 103

A new case of facultative hemorrhagic diathesis is described in a 19 year old female and the coagulatory anomaly examined. The experiments show that the coagulatory disturbance should be ascribed to a defective aggregation of fibrin monomers associated with hypofibrinogenemia. Some of its characteristics are the markedly prolonged thrombin-, reptilase-time as well prolonged prothrombin and partial thromboplastin time. The plasma fibrinogen concentration measured by the immunologic method is reduced. The streptokinase induced digestion of fibrinogen Giessen II plasma occurred at a slower rate than normal plasma with persistence of the large fibrinogen degradation products. Fibrinogen Giessen II appears to be a congenital hypodysfibrinogenemia with abnormality of fibrinogen resulting in delayed coagulation and a retarded fibrinogenolysis rate.
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PMID:[Hypodysfibrinogenemia: fibrinogen giessen II (author's transl)]. 116 25

The essentially indefinite storage life of previously frozen erythrocytes (PFE), combined with the virtual freedom from hepatitis, high 2,3-diphosphoglycerate (2,3-DPG) content, and low level of HL-A antigens, should make its use in open-heart surgery attractive. However, since the suspension medium for PFE is usually saline, the potential exists for creating a hemorrhagic diathesis by accentuating the dilution of plasma procoagulants by the pump prime. To test this possibility, we used PFE exclusively in transfusing a group of 13 open-heart surgery patients; they were given no plasma or platelets. A control group of 12 open-heart surgery patients were transfused with only shelf blood. Determination of prothrombin times (PT), partial thromboplastin times (PTT), platelets, and fibrinogen were done at various intervals. No clinically significant differences between the two groups were seen in any of these parameters at any interval, and there was no significant difference between the groups in amount of chest tube drainage or transfusions in the first 24 hours. It is concluded that most open-heart surgery can be safely performed exclusively with frozen blood.
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PMID:The effect on blood coagulation of the exclusive use of transfusions of frozen red cells during and after cardiopulmonary bypass. 116 42

This study characterizes a congenital hemorrhagic disorder caused by a platelet function defect with the following features: (1) severely impaired platelet aggregation and fibrinogen or von Willebrand factor (vWF) binding induced by adenosine diphosphate (ADP); (2) defective aggregation, release reaction, and fibrinogen or vWF binding induced by other agonists; (3) normal aggregation and release reaction induced by high concentrations of thrombin or collagen; (4) no further inhibition by ADP scavengers of aggregation, release reaction, and fibrinogen or vWF binding, comparable with those observed for normal platelets in the presence of ADP scavengers; (5) normal membrane glycoprotein (GP) composition and normal binding of the anti-GP IIb/IIIa monoclonal antibody 10E5; (6) no acceleration by ADP of binding of the anti-GP IIb/IIIa monoclonal antibody 7E3; (7) normal platelet-fibrin clot retraction if induced by thrombin or reptilase plus epinephrine, absent if induced by reptilase plus ADP; (8) no inhibition by ADP of the prostaglandin E1-induced increase in platelet cyclic adenosine monophosphate, but normal inhibition by epinephrine; (9) defective mobilization of cytoplasmic Ca2+ by ADP; (10) normal binding of 14C-ADP to fresh platelets, but defective binding of [2-3H]-ADP to formalin-fixed platelets. This congenital platelet function defect is characterized by selective impairment of platelet responses to ADP, caused by either decreased number of platelet ADP receptors or abnormalities of the signal-transduction pathway of platelet activation by ADP.
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PMID:Identification of a new congenital defect of platelet function characterized by severe impairment of platelet responses to adenosine diphosphate. 133 2

We describe six new cases of a hemorrhagic diathesis induced by contact with Lonomia achelous caterpillars. Onset of clinical bleeding varied between a few hours and 10 days post-exposure. Laboratory coagulation tests showed prolonged PT, PTT and ThT; normal platelets and a marked decrease of fibrinogen, factor V, plasminogen and factor XIII (including its subunits A and S). Factors VII, II and alfa 2 anti-plasmin were variably affected. In addition, activation of the fibrinolytic system and the generation of a procoagulant effect could also be demonstrated. Two cases developed severe hemorrhagic diathesis and one of them died of a cerebral hemorrhage. Different aspects of this rare syndrome are discussed in relation to its complex physiopathology and the variability observed in all clinical and laboratory manifestations. Therapeutic recommendations and some possible hazards following replacement transfusions are also considered.
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PMID:Six new cases of a caterpillar-induced bleeding syndrome. 137 51

The precipitous increase in the number of structurally defined fibrinogen defects in recent years has resulted from application of high performance liquid chromatography in combination with peptide mapping and sequencing procedures. More recently, application of DNA sequence of polymerase chain reaction products has accelerated the pace of identification of mutations. Highly frequent defects are Arg substitutions, accounting for eight mutation sites substituted by Cys or His and less frequently by Ser. Amino acid substitutions at different positions on all three chains have pointed to possible structures with polymerization-related functions. Also, substitutions yielding consensus sequences resulted in extra glycosylations of the appropriate Asn in four different mutation sites; the impaired polymerization was reported associated with undue bleeding in two of these. Among informative defects have been those of homozygous probands with A alpha 16Arg----His and A alpha 16Arg----Cys in that failure of release of peptide A (but not of B), as shown with A alpha 16Arg----Cys, resulted in markedly delayed polymerization of such fibrin monomers, in general agreement with conclusions reached in studies of normal fibrin. This dysfunction, as well as the slow rate of release of A shown with A alpha 16Arg----His, was associated with clinically significant hemorrhagic diathesis (in the homozygous probands), consistent with the known physiologic importance of peptide A cleavage in normal hemostasis. Also, defects on the A alpha 17-19 sequence resulting in impaired polymerization are consistent with the known role of this segment in polymerization. Of similar interest have been defects within a B beta chain span encoded its exon 2. Two defects resulting in impaired polymerization and thrombin binding were associated with clinical thrombosis commencing in early life, and this lends strong support to other evidence suggesting a role in polymerization and in noncatalytic thrombin binding by this B beta chain segment. Thrombosis associated with A alpha 554Arg----Cys in a heterozygous proband with impaired tPA interaction is unique and may shed light on this poorly understood but important interaction among fibrin, plasminogen, and tPA. A group of different defects within the gamma 275-375 sequence have pointed to a polymerization role, evidenced by delayed gelation and impaired binding of mutant D to normal fibrin E. An unusual example is a 15 residue insertion between gamma 350 and 351 resulting in impaired polymerization, gamma chain crosslinking, and platelet aggregation support and is associated with hemorrhagic diathesis and poor healing.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Fibrinogen anomalies and disease. A clinical update. 140 80


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