Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Portal vein thrombosis secondary to protein C deficiency is a rare finding. Diagnosing a portal vein thrombosis itself is difficult due to nonspecific symptoms such as nausea, vomiting, anorexia, and weight loss. Proving that a protein C deficiency is the cause of a portal vein thrombosis is even more difficult as an extensive and thorough workup is required to rule out malignancies, myeloproliferative disorders, and hypercoaguable states which can all lead to thromboses. Patients require anticoagulation to prevent two dangerous complications of portal vein thrombosis; portal hypertension leading to esophageal varices with massive hemetemesis and extension of thrombus from the portal vein into the mesenteric veins leading to intestinal ischemia and death. In this case report, we present a patient with the complaint of painless jaundice who was found to have an incidental finding of portal vein thrombosis secondary to protein C deficiency. The different etiologies of portal vein thrombosis, along with diagnosis and treatment options will be discussed and highlighted.
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PMID:A rare incidental finding in a case of painless jaundice. 3071 33

Orthostatic stress causes significant plasma shift and raises transmural pressure in lower extremities, resulting in an increase in endothelial activation and plasma proteins concentrations, possibly including coagulation factors. This may lead to activation of the coagulation system during standing. To test this hypothesis, we recruited 18 healthy volunteers (9 females and 9 males; mean age: 25+/-1.2 years; body mass index: 21.7+/-0.5 kg/m(2)). Hemodynamics, plasma shift (extrapolated from sequential hematocrit concentration), plasma proteins, and coagulation tests, including procoagulants; fibrinogen, factor V, and factor VIII activity; prothrombin fragments 1 and 2; and endothelial activation-related factors (tissue factor and von Willebrand factor), as well as protein C global pathway, were determined at rest supine and at 15 minutes, 30 minutes, and 60 minutes of still standing. Thirty minutes of standing caused a decrease in plasma volume by 12.0+/-0.5% and an increase in plasma protein by 13.0+/-0.7%. Fibrinogen, factor V, and factor VIII activity rose by 12.0+/-1.2%, 13.0+/-1.0%, and 40.0+/-6.0% (P<0.002 for all), respectively. Prothrombin fragments 1 and 2 were elevated by 150.0+/-30.0%. Tissue factor and von Willebrand factor increased by 30.0+/-9.0% and 17.4+/-51.0% (P<0.02 for both), respectively. However, protein C assay results decreased from 0.95+/-0.20 to 0.83+/-0.16 (P<0.001). We hereby introduce a novel physiological mechanism, "orthostatic procoagulation," that should be considered during coagulation tests. Furthermore, it could be extrapolated to the pathophysiology of stasis and venous thromboembolism.
Hypertension 2008 Jun
PMID:Orthostatic hypercoagulability: a novel physiological mechanism to activate the coagulation system. 1841 85

An 84-year-old female patient was scheduled to undergo AVR, CABG, and Maze procedure. She had a history of hypertension, cerebral infarction, and branch retinal vein occlusion. Warfarin was administered preoperatively. Before the cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB), heparin 5,000 units was administered. Activated coagulation times (ACTs) before and after CPB were 123 sec and 157 sec, respectively. Additional heparin of 5,000 units extended ACT to 221 seconds, which was not enough for the CPB. Heparin 10,000 units was added, and ACT was 157 sec. AntithrombinIII (ATIII) and platelet counts were 75% and 270,000 mm(-3), respectively. ATIII 1,500 units was administered. ACT and ATIII became 133 sec and 123%, respectively. Because heparin resistance did not respond to ATIII, the operative method was changed to off-pump CABG. A postoperative examination revealed high factor VIII activity of 263%. Other results were as follows: protein C antigen, 40%; protein S antigen, 65%; factor VII, 50%; platelet factor 4, 12%; heparin cofactor II, 104%; von Willebrand factor antigen, 181%; heparin-PF4-IgG antibody, negative; factor VIII inhibitor, negative. The low values of protein C, protein S, and factor VII may have been caused by warfarin. Other values were normal, except for the von Willebrand factor antigen.
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PMID:[Heparin resistance associated with elevated factor VIII]. 1841 8

We carried out clinical-instrumental examination of 456 men aged 40-54 years. First degree arterial hypertension was revealed in 165 men. Left ventricular hypertrophy was found in 48 (30%), increased intima-media thickness (IMT) - in 67 (41%) patients. There was significant medium power relationship between IMT and left ventricular myocardial mass (correlation coefficient 0.41). Formation of left ventricular hypertrophy was related to parameters of 24 hour blood pressure monitoring, arterial hypertension in brothers and sisters, body weight, and duration of obesity. Significant medium power relation was obtained between tension of endothelial system of hemostasis (protein C) and severity of left ventricular hypertrophy (correlation coefficient - 0,3). Age, heredity, low density lipoprotein, cholesterol, uric acid level mattered for IMT increase.
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PMID:[Left ventricular hypertrophy and thickening of common carotid artery wall in men aged 40 - 54 years with I degree arterial hypertension]. 1842 55

Several small case-control studies have investigated whether factor V Leiden (FVL) is a risk factor for retinal vein occlusion (RVO) and generated conflicting data. To clarify this question we performed a large two-centre case-control study and a meta-analysis of published studies. Two hundred seven consecutive patients with RVO and a control group of 150 subjects were screened between 1996 and 2006. A systematic meta-analysis was done combining our study with further 17 published European case-control studies. APC resistance was detected in 16 out of 207 (7.7%) patients and eight out of 150 (5.3%) controls. The odds ratio (OR) estimated was 1.49 with a (non-significant) 95% confidence interval (CI) of 0.62-3.57. The meta-analysis including 18 studies with a total of 1,748 patients and 2,716 controls showed a significantly higher prevalence of FVL in patients with RVO compared to healthy controls (combined OR 1.66; 95% CI 1.19-2.32). All single studies combined in the meta-analysis were too small to reliably detect the effect individually. This explains the seemingly contradictory data in the literature. In conclusion, the prevalence of APC resistance (and FVL) is increased in patients with RVO compared to controls, but the effect is only moderate. Therefore, there is no indication for general screening of factor V mutation in all patients with RVO. We recommend this test to be performed in patients older than 50 years with an additional history of thromboembolic event and in younger patients without general risk factors like hypertension.
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PMID:The prevalence of activated protein C (APC) resistance and factor V Leiden is significantly higher in patients with retinal vein occlusion without general risk factors. Case-control study and meta-analysis. 1844 23

Occlusions of retinal veins (central and branch) represent multifactorialy-conditioned disease involving presumably older patients, in whom the changes of retinal vessels caused by hypertension and atherosclerosis present the most important pathophysiological factors for development of this disease. In last years, the intensive scientific research is focused to the explanation of the role of the defects of the coagulations cascade. Especially in younger patients, the most often mentioned defect of the coagulations cascade is called as APC-resistance. Up to 95% of all patients with APC-resistance are carriers of so called Leiden mutation. The aim of our study was to establish the prevalence of the ACP-resistance in 92 patients with central or branch occlusion of the retinal vein verified by means of angiography treated at the Department of Ophthalmology, Faculty Hospital, Olomouc, Czech Republic, EU, during the period 1999-2005. The control group consisted of 40 patients without any vascular, eye-related disease. In the group of patients with occlusion of the retinal vein, the prevalence of the APC-resistance was 10.9% and in the control group 5%. In the group of patients 55 years old and younger the prevalence of the ACP-resistance was 14.3%, in patients older than 55 years it was 5.6%. According to the relatively small groups of patients, the established difference did not reach the level of statistical evidence. Results of our study confirmed the conclusions of previously published papers that the prevalence of the APC-resistance is not significantly higher in patients with retinal vein occlusion according to the prevalence in controls.
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PMID:[Disturbances of the plasma coagulation defects in retinal venous occlusions]. 1863 Jan 61

Pregnancy is widely authorized in systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). Fertility is similar in SLE and in the general population although the age of menarche seems higher. Some cases of sterility might be attributed to SLE because of autoimmune ovaritis or antiphospholipid antibodies (aPL). These antibodies might lead to endothelial activation and thrombosis by influencing homeostasis, complement activation, inhibition of protein C and annexin V. They might have a deleterious effect on embryonic implantation by adhesion to the trophoblast, inhibition of invasion and placentation and decreased hCG production. The most important part of sterility seems secondary to the use of cyclophosphamide and might be prevented by acetate leuprolide administration. Maternal morbidity seems correlated to SLE activity (controlled by pregnancy planning), hypertension, preeclampsia, Hemolysis, Elevated Liver Enzymes, Low Platelets (HELLP) syndrome, therapy and aPL. Hydroxychloroquine (HCQ) should be maintained throughout pregnancy. Aspirin is prescribed alone in patients with asymptomatic aPL and in addition to heparin if there is a history of thrombosis or fetal loss with aspirin. Fetal and neonatal morbidity correlate with prematurity, adverse effects or maternal steroid therapy and maternal anti-SSA antibodies with 1 to 2% risk of congenital atrioventricular block. Abnormal obstetrical echography-doppler examination is the best predictor of pregnancy outcome. Abnormal umbilical artery flow on the second trimester echodoppler examination and history of thrombophlebitis predict fetal or neonatal death. Abnormal uterine notch on the second trimester echodoppler examination predicts adverse pregnancy outcome. Except for the preventive therapy of congenital atrioventricular block, modalities of SLE pregnancy monitoring and therapy are now well established.
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PMID:[Pregnancy and systemic lupus erythematosus]. 1869 42

The pathogenesis and treatment of retinal vein occlusions (RVO) are largely unclear. Prevalence of cardiovascular risk factors and of thrombophilic abnormalities was evaluated in 117 patients (61 M, 56 F; mean age 51 +/- 13 years) with a history of RVO (62 central, CRVO; 48 branch, BRVO; 7 both) and in 202 age- and sex-matched control subjects. Cardiovascular outcome after a mean 8.2 year follow-up was recorded for 90 patients. Arterial hypertension was significantly more frequent in patients than in controls (64.9 vs. 28.2%; adjusted OR 4.5 95% CI 2.4-7.9; P < 0.0001), as well diabetes mellitus (17.9 vs. 7.9%; P < 0.05). Antithrombin, Protein C, Protein S and homocysteine levels, lupus anticoagulant, anticardiolipin antibodies, FV G1691A and prothrombin G20210A polymorphisms were comparable in the two groups, nor were different according to RVO localization or to the age at event. BRVO patients were significantly older (55 +/- 9 vs. 47 +/- 15 years; P = 0.002) and had higher prevalence of diabetes, overweight and hypertension (29.2 vs. 8.1%; 83.3 vs. 58.1%, 79.2 vs. 56.5%; P always <0.05). In 58/90 (64%) patients for whom clinical follow-up was available, new vascular events were recorded (coronary/cerebral, n = 38); only 22 patients (24%) received long-term antiplatelet agents (mostly aspirin 100 mg/d), with lower, but not statistically significant, prevalence of overall vascular recurrence (45.4 vs. 70.6%, P = 0.06). High rate of vascular recurrence is shown in patients with previous RVO, in which conventional cardiovascular risk factors play a major role, especially in BRVO and in older patients.
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PMID:Cardiovascular risk factors and outcome in patients with retinal vein occlusion. 1970 55

We report on 2 cases of visceral arterial embolism presenting with acute abdominal pain. In neither patient a cause could be established on initial clinical, laboratory, echographic or radiological investigation. Both patients were subsequently found to have a mural thrombus in the thoracic aorta, with visceral arterial embolism. Each underwent a successful operative thrombectomy. Both patients had a normal underlying aortic intima at inspection. The first patient was a young male with no known diseases. He regularly used cannabis and tested positive on admission, an association not yet reported with aortic mural thrombus. He was found to have a slightly reduced protein C. The second patient was a middle aged man with non-insulin dependent diabetes, hyperlipidaemia, arterial hypertension and hyperthyroidism. He was found to have an underlying adenocarcinoma of the lung and received chemotherapy. He died due to his cancer, 4 months after first presentation.
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PMID:An uncommon cause of visceral arterial embolism in patients presenting with acute abdominal pain: a report of 2 cases. 2045 52

A 55-year-old Caucasian man with history of hypertension, diabetes mellitus, protein C deficiency, and deep vein thrombosis presented with typical angina. Both computed tomography and transesophageal echocardiography identified a mobile mass in left atrium but could not differentiate between thrombus and myxoma. A cardiac catheterization with coronary angiography demonstrated tumor neovascularization, suggestive of myxoma. Pathology examination after mass resection confirmed the diagnosis. Patients with myxoma could present with obstructive, embolic, or constitutional symptoms. However, typical angina has never been reported as the primary manifestation. Although being helpful, various noninvasive imaging modalities, including magnetic resonance image, often have limitations to help making a definitive diagnosis, before surgery decision, especially under hypercoagulable condition. In contrast, cardiac catheterization can help not only in differentiation diagnosis but also in detecting possible intracoronary embolization from myxoma. In patients with myxoma complicated with hypercoagulable disorders, anticoagulation will play essential role in long-term care.
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PMID:Angina pectoris in a patient with protein C deficiency and deep vein thrombosis: thrombus versus myxoma? 2152 88


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