Gene/Protein
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Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0020473 (
hyperlipidemia
)
15,891
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
1) Antiphospholipid antibody syndrome may be associated with unusual sites of thrombosis. 2) Laboratory evaluation involves testing for antiphospholipid antibodies: lupus anticoagulant and anticardiolipin antibodies. 3) Acute management of thrombosis involves immediate anticoagulation. Low-molecular-weight heparins are as safe and effective as unfractionated heparin in this setting. Arterial events may require emergent thrombolytic therapy. Monitoring of the APTT with unfractionated heparin in the presence of a lupus anticoagulant is ineffective; these patients require monitoring of antifactor Xa levels or the use of LMWH, which does not require monitoring. 4) The pharmacokinetics of LMWH change in pregnancy, resulting in a shorter plasma half-life and larger volume of distribution. Monitoring of antifactor Xa levels is necessary. 5) Chronic anticoagulation is best achieved with warfarin, with significantly decreased rates of recurrent events when the INR is > or = 3.0. Long-term, if not life-long, anticoagulation is often necessary. Warfarin is teratogenic, and individuals desiring pregnancy will need to convert to therapeutic, not prophylactic, doses of either unfractionated heparin or LMWH. 6) As part of optimal management of thrombosis in APS, additional risk factors for thrombosis should be eliminated or reduced. These include comorbid illnesses such as hypertension and
hyperlipidemia
, as well as smoking. 7) Tamoxifen, raloxifene, oral contraceptives, and hormone replacement therapy are all associated with an increased risk of
DVT
in the general population. In APS patients receiving therapeutic anticoagulation, the addition of these drugs should not increase thrombosis risk. In APS patients not receiving anticoagulant therapy, these hormonal therapies may increase the thrombosis risk.
...
PMID:Management of thrombosis in women with antiphospholipid syndrome. 1121 45
Hypercoagulable states due either to inherited or acquired thrombotic risk factors are only present in approximately half of cases of
DVT
, but the causes in the other half, remain unknown. The importance of biological risk factors such as
hyperlipidemia
, hypofibrinolysis and hemorheological alterations in the pathogenesis of
DVT
has not been well established. In order to ascertain whether the above mentioned biological factors are associated with
DVT
and could constitute independent risk factors, we carried out a case-control study in 109 first
DVT
patients in whom inherited or acquired thrombophilic risk factors had been ruled out and 121 healthy controls age (42+/-15 years) and sex matched. From all the biological variables analyzed (cholesterol, triglycerides, glucose, fibrinogen, erythrocyte aggregation, hematocrit, plasma viscosity and PAI-1) only fibrinogen concentration reached a statistically significant difference on the comparison of means (290+/-73 mg/dl in cases vs 268+/-58 mg/dl in controls, p<0.05). After this continuous variables were dichotomized according to our reference values, the percentage of cases with cholesterolemia >220 mg/dl, hematocrit >45% and fibrinogen >300 mg/dl was higher in cases than in controls: 38% vs 22%; p<0.01; 43% vs 27%; p<0.05; 36% vs 23%; p<0.05, respectively. The percentage of cases with PAI-1 values >30 ng/ml, 37% vs 25% was borderline significant; p=0.055. Multivariate logistic regression analysis showed that cholesterolemia >220 mg/dl and fibrinogen >300 mg/dl constitute independent predictors of venous thrombotic risk. The adjusted OR's were 2.03 (95% CI; 1.12-3.70) for cholesterolemia and 1.94 (95% CI; 1.07-3.55) for fibrinogen. When these two variables combined
DVT
risk rose about fourfold (3.96; p<0.05). Our results suggest that hypercholesterolemia and hyperfibrinogenemia should be added to the list of known
DVT
risk factors and we recommend adopting measures to decrease these variables in the population with a high risk of
DVT
.
...
PMID:Biological risk factors for deep vein trombosis. 1190 70