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Query: UMLS:C0023890 (
cirrhosis
)
42,195
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The role played by coagulation defects in the occurrence of bleeding in
cirrhosis
is still unclear. This is partly due to the lack of tests that truly reflect the balance of procoagulant and anticoagulant factors in vivo. Conventional coagulation tests such as prothrombin time and activated partial
thromboplastin
time are inadequate to explore the physiological mechanism regulating thrombin, because they do not allow full activation of the main anticoagulant factor, protein C, whose levels are considerably reduced in
cirrhosis
. We used a thrombin generation test to investigate the coagulation function in patients with
cirrhosis
. Thrombin generation measured without thrombomodulin was impaired, which is consistent with the reduced levels of procoagulant factors typically found in
cirrhosis
. However, when the test was modified by adding thrombomodulin (i.e., the protein C activator operating in vivo), patients generated as much thrombin as controls. Hence, the reduction of procoagulant factors in patients with
cirrhosis
is compensated by the reduction of anticoagulant factors, thus leaving the coagulation balance unaltered. These findings help clarify the pathophysiology of hemostasis in
cirrhosis
, suggesting that bleeding is mainly due to the presence of hemodynamic alterations and that conventional coagulation tests are unlikely to reflect the coagulation status of these patients. In conclusion, generation of thrombin is normal in
cirrhosis
. For a clinical validation of these findings, a prospective clinical trial is warranted where the results of thrombin generation in the presence of thrombomodulin are related to the occurrence of bleeding.
...
PMID:Evidence of normal thrombin generation in cirrhosis despite abnormal conventional coagulation tests. 1572 21
Accelerated fibrinolysis associated with liver disease can be demonstrated by various tests that are either nonspecific in liver disease or that demonstrate only an extrinsic pathway. In the present study we used a new method to assess the global fibrinolytic capacity (GFC) of both the intrinsic and extrinsic pathways in patients with chronic liver disease. Forty patients with the diagnosis of chronic liver disease were included in the study. Seventeen age-matched and gender-matched healthy control individuals were enrolled as a control group. The GFC was studied with semiquantitative macrolatex agglutination. The study population consisted of 40 patients with chronic liver disease (group 1, patients with chronic hepatitis; group 2, patients with
cirrhosis
; group 3, patients with hepatocellular carcinoma), mean age 53.3 +/- 13 years, and a control group (group 4) consisting of 17 healthy individuals (mean age 55 +/- 12.2 years). The GFC was significantly higher in patients than in control individuals (13.8 +/- 9 microg/ml, 13.6 +/- 11 microg/ml, 14.1 +/- 14 microg/ml, 1.9 +/- 2.2 microg/ml, respectively; P < 0.05). There was no difference between the patient groups (P > 0.05). There was a significant positive relationship between the GFC and the prothrombin time and activated partial
thromboplastin
time values (P < 0.05). A negative correlation was also observed between the GFC and thrombocyte counts (P < 0.05). In conclusion, our results suggest that patients with chronic liver disease have hyperfibrinolysis, as reflected by the increased GFC. Elucidation of the GFC in chronic liver disease can reflect the net fibrinolytic capacity of those patients who are prone to hyperfibrinolysis resulting in bleeding tendencies and hemorrhages.
...
PMID:Hemostasis and global fibrinolytic capacity in chronic liver disease. 1789 Sep 49
Hemophilia B is a congenital recessive disorder caused by deficiency of coagulation factor IX (FIX). Surgical procedures can be performed in patients with hemophilia using high-purity and/or recombinant FIX, which has been shown to be safe and effective in surgical hemostasis. Liver transplantation is the only potentially curative treatment available for these patients, providing a long-term phenotypic cure for hemophilia. End-stage liver disease together with hemophilia exposes patients to greater risks of bleeding complications during the perioperative period with consequent difficulties in managing coagulopathy. The limited experiences reported by different investigators and the various strategies for clotting factor replacement make it difficult to define a single approach with respect to the optimal dose and method of administering FIX to achieve perioperative hemostasis. The limits of plasma-based coagulation tests--prothrombin time, activated partial
thromboplastin
time--have made thromboelastography a valid alternative in this kind of surgery. It has been demonstrated to be a useful tool for real-time analysis of clot formation using a whole-blood assay format. Further, it accurately illustrates the clinical effects of procoagulant or anticoagulant interventions. In this article, we have described the usefulness of thromboelastography to monitor the ability of high-purity FIX supplementation to restore a normal coagulation state and to guide the perioperative administration of blood products in a successful orthotopic liver transplantation in a hemophilic patient with deficiencies of factors IX and X, presenting with hepatitis C virus-related
cirrhosis
and hepatocellular carcinoma.
...
PMID:Use of recombinant factor IX and thromboelastography in a patient with hemophilia B undergoing liver transplantation: a case report. 1867 36
Liver disease has been associated with abnormalities in haemostasis. In this study, coagulation times, platelet counts, platelet activity parameters, activities of individual coagulation factors, D-dimers, antithrombin (AT) and protein C activity were measured in 42 dogs with histologically confirmed liver disease. Outcome was correlated with histological diagnosis. One or more coagulation abnormalities were present in 57% of dogs with hepatic disease. Activated partial
thromboplastin
time was significantly prolonged in dogs with chronic hepatitis (CH), with or without
cirrhosis
. Mean platelet numbers, AT and factor IX activity were significantly lower in dogs with CH plus
cirrhosis
, compared to dogs with other hepatopathies. D-dimers were not significantly increased in any group. Only three dogs, all with different histological diagnoses, satisfied the criteria for disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC). Haemostatic abnormalities were primarily seen in dogs with
cirrhosis
and this may be due to reduced synthesis rather than increased consumption of coagulation factors.
...
PMID:Coagulation disorders in dogs with hepatic disease. 1948 41
Acquired coagulation defects are characterized by a decrease of both pro- and anti-coagulants. Because of this, we hypothesise that global tests, such as the prothrombin and partial
thromboplastin
times (PT and APTT), might be unsuitable for their investigation. Indeed, these tests are not good predictors of bleeding in acquired coagulopathies as they are in the congenital ones. This article discusses the possible reasons for this, using
cirrhosis
and the neonatal period as epitomes of acquired coagulation defects. Both display normal thrombin generation in the presence of thrombomodulin, in spite of prolonged PT and APTT. We surmise that, because of their design, the PT and APTT are responsive to thrombin generated as a function of pro-coagulants, but much less to thrombin inhibited by the anti-coagulants, especially protein C, which is activated to a limited extent in the absence of thrombomodulin. In conclusion, the PT and APTT can tell us whether or not a patient is deficient in one or more pro-coagulants, but not whether this deficiency is counterbalanced by a parallel deficiency of anti-coagulants. Thrombin generation assays are more suitable than PT and APTT for use in acquired coagulation defects.
...
PMID:Acquired coagulation disorders: revisited using global coagulation/anticoagulation testing. 1965 48
Patients with liver disease frequently have substantial changes in their haemostatic system. This is reflected in abnormal test results on routine coagulation screening assays such as the prothrombin time (PT), activated
thromboplastin
time (APTT) and platelet count. Traditionally, attempts were made to correct abnormalities in the haemostatic system as measured by routine coagulation assays prior to invasive procedures by infusion of platelets or fresh frozen plasma (FFP). Recent laboratory and clinical data have indicated that the haemostatic reserve in cirrhotic patients is relatively well maintained although the coagulation screening assays suggest otherwise. Pre-procedural correction of coagulation tests with blood products may therefore not be necessary, and may even have harmful side-effects. In particular, fluid overload resulting in exacerbation of portal hypertension by infusion of blood products may in fact promote bleeding. In recent years, it has become clear that reduction of the central and portal venous pressure by fluid restriction and avoidance of blood product transfusion is a beneficial strategy in minimizing bleeding during liver surgery in cirrhotic patients. Some investigators have even taken this a step further and suggested pre-procedural phlebotomy in liver transplant recipients. The aim of this review is to provide an overview of recent studies and developments which have changed our understanding of the clinical relevance of abnormal coagulation tests in patients with
cirrhosis
, and which have contributed to a reduction in blood loss and transfusion requirements when liver surgery is needed in these patients.
...
PMID:How to minimize blood loss during liver surgery in patients with cirrhosis. 1981 7
Portal vein thromboses are frequent in cirrhotic patients and may be favoured by hypercoagulability in the splanchnic venous system. The coagulation balance and thrombin generation (TG) were evaluated in platelet-free plasma obtained from portal and systemic blood samples in 28 cirrhotic patients while undergoing transjugular intrahepatic porto-systemic shunt. TG assay (TGA) was performed with all samples from cirrhotic patients and with plasma samples from 14 healthy controls, with varying concentrations of tissue factor and phospholipids, with or without thrombomodulin. Screening tests and specific assays were also performed and activated partial
thromboplastin
time was shorter in portal plasma samples with higher FVIII and lower protein C levels, well correlated with Child-Pugh scores, and higher D-dimers and F1+2 levels However, all TGA parameters were similar in portal and jugular samples, possibly due in part to similar concentrations of factor II and antithrombin in these two sites of plasma sampling. TGA showed lower thrombin peaks and endogenous thrombin potential values in cirrhotic plasma compared to those of healthy controls. Importantly, a resistance to thrombomodulin that well correlated with factor VIII and PC levels, was evidenced in all samples from patients with
cirrhosis
, and was more significant in those from severely affected cases. This study therefore supports the existence of a relative hypercoagulability in the portal vein of cirrhotic patients that is likely due to protein C/S deficiency and to high FVIII levels.
...
PMID:Comparative study of coagulation and thrombin generation in the portal and jugular plasma of patients with cirrhosis. 2080 6
Cirrhosis
is characterized by a complex coagulation defect leading to the prolongation of the prothrombin and activated partial
thromboplastin
times (PT and APTT). Arbitrary PT cut-off values are still used as a yardstick to guide treatment with fresh-frozen plasma (FFP) or other pro-coagulant agents in patients undergoing invasive procedures. No randomized studies on the FFP efficacy are available, and are unlikely to be carried out because of their complex organization. An interim solution could be to evaluate the in vitro thrombin generation in plasmas from patients with
cirrhosis
when mixed with appropriate amounts of pooled normal plasma (PNP). The PT, APTT and thrombin generations in the presence of thrombomodulin were examined in 58 patients with
cirrhosis
and 24 healthy subjects both before and after mixing their plasmas with PNP at a proportion of 4 + 1 (patient + PNP), chosen to mimic in vivo conditions when patients are treated with 10 ml/kg of FFP. The PT and APTT, which were abnormal in the majority of unmixed patient plasmas were shortened considerably, but did not normalize completely when mixed with PNP. Thrombin generation, which was already within normal limits in all unmixed patient plasmas, remained essentially unchanged after mixing with PNP. In conclusion, thrombin generation in patients with
cirrhosis
does not appreciably change after in vitro addition of PNP despite PT and APTT shortening would suggest otherwise. These results question the validity of the PT as a stand-alone test to guide transfusion of FFP in the setting of chronic liver disease.
...
PMID:Thrombin generation in plasma from patients with cirrhosis supplemented with normal plasma: considerations on the efficacy of treatment with fresh-frozen plasma. 2129 60
Citrin deficiency (CD) is an autosomal recessive disorder with SLC25A13 as causative gene that encodes citrin, the liver-type aspartate/glutamate carrier isoform 2 (AGC2). Neonatal intrahepatic cholestasis caused by citrin deficiency (NICCD), the major CD phenotype at pediatric age, has been previously reported as a self-limiting condition with clinical presentations resolving between 6 months and 1 year of life. We report the prenatal diagnosis of CD in a family with a fatal NICCD proband. The proband was a 10-month-old male presenting cough for 8 days and jaundiced skin 1 day. Physical examination revealed fever, dark jaundiced sclera and skin, hoarse breathing sounds, and hepatosplenomegaly. Laboratory tests uncovered elevated cholestatic indices, increased ammonia, and prolonged activated partial
thromboplastin
time and prothrombin time, and reduced fibrinogen. Sonography showed the features of
liver cirrhosis
. Metabolome analysis uncovered large quantity of 4-hydroxyphenyllactate and dicarboxylates in urine and increased citrulline and methionine in blood. The patient passed away due to liver failure at his age of 13.5 months. Mutation analysis revealed him a homozygote of 851del4, a four-base deletion in exon 9 of SLC25A13 gene. On request of the parents who had a second fetus, prenatal diagnosis of CD was performed by PCR-electrophoresis following amniocentesis and amniocyte culture, and demonstrated the fetus a carrier of the same mutation. The fatal proband in the present report has provided clinical evidence challenging the traditional concept on NICCD prognosis. Moreover, as the first trial on CD prenatal diagnosis, this study might open a novel area for clinical management of CD.
...
PMID:Prenatal diagnosis of citrin deficiency in a Chinese family with a fatal proband. 2209 53
In order to investigate the relationship between hemostatic abnormalities and portal vein thrombosis (PVT) in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), platelets, prothrombin time (PT), activated partial
thromboplastin
time (aPTT), thrombin time, fibrinogen, d-dimer, fibrinogen degradation products (FDPs), protein C, protein S, antithrombin, plasminogen, antiplasmin, coagulation factors (CFs) V, VII, VIII, IX, XI, and XIII, von Willebrand factor (vWF), prothrombin fragment 1 + 2 (PF 1 + 2), tissue-type plasminogen activator (tPA), and plasminogen activator inhibitor 1 (PAI-1) were studied in patients with HCC, cholangiocarcinoma, and metastatic liver tumors and in
cirrhosis
patients with or without PVT. Platelet, antithrombin, protein C, plasminogen, and CFs V, VII, IX, XI, and XIII levels of HCC group were found lower and PT, aPTT, thrombin time, vWF, FDPs, PF 1 + 2, tPA, and PAI-1 levels were higher than the control group. Our findings suggested that the abnormalities of coagulation and fibrinolysis systems have some role in provoking thrombosis of portal veins in HCC, in addition to the invasion of portal veins by hepatoma cells.
...
PMID:Hemostatic abnormalities in cirrhosis and tumor-related portal vein thrombosis. 2216 87
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