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Query: UMLS:C0024141 (
systemic lupus erythematosus
)
44,322
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A young man presenting with recurrent
deep venous thrombosis
was found to have a
lupus
type coagulation inhibitor. He showed neither clinical nor serological evidence of systemic
lupus
. The value of the Russell viper venom coagulation time in the detection of the inhibitor is demonstrated. Anticoagulant therapy has not caused any bleeding complication despite the presence of the inhibitor.
...
PMID:Recurrent venous thrombosis with a "lupus" coagulation inhibitor in the absence of systemic lupus. 27 Sep 97
Three women and five men with chronic biological false-positive seroreactions for syphilis and circulating anticoagulants exhibited a vascular syndrome consisting of recurrent
deep venous thrombosis
of the extremities and necrotizing purpura with painful superfacial starlike ulcers around the ankles. The skin biopsies revealed a unique picture of massive proliferation of hemorrhagic dermal capillaries without a significant inflammatory reaction. Some virus infection may function as a trigger of this peripheral vascular syndrome, because 6 of the 8 patients had a preceding pneumonia with pleural vascular effusion. Considering that the three women had clinical and laboratory evidence of
systemic lupus erythematosus
(
SLE
) this syndrome may be related to
SLE
.
...
PMID:A peripheral vascular syndrome overlapping with systemic lupus erythematosus. Recurrent venous thrombosis and hemorrhagic capillary proliferation with circulating anticoagulants and false-positive seroreactions for syphilis. 90 39
Most people who experience venous thrombosis have normal hemostasis. Some people have inherited deficiencies of protein C, protein S, and antithrombin iii. They tend to have
deep venous thrombosis
which increases their risk for pulmonary emboli. Some acquired disorders which predisposes people to thrombosis include defective fibrinolysis which often occurs after surgery or infection, Trousseau's syndrome (excessive coagulant activity linked with adenocarcinoma), and
lupus
anticoagulant which is an immunoglobulin G or M antibody directed against negatively charged phospholipids. Hormones and probably not a dilution effect reduces free and bound protein S levels during pregnancy. Functional protein S activity is still 40-50% below normal levels 1-3 days after delivery. This decrease appears to protect against bleeding but does have venous thrombosis and pulmonary emboli during pregnancy as side effects. Non-oral-contraceptive (OC) users have greatly higher protein S levels than do OC users (28.6 mcg/ml vs. 24.3 mcg/ml; p.005) which gives more credence to the belief that hormones are responsible for the fall in protein S activity during pregnancy. OCs reduce free and total protein S levels almost 20%. Smoking may even further reduce these levels in women during pregnancy and who use Ocs. Women who have had venous thrombosis should not use OCs. Physicians should also consider family history especially age of affected family member, severity of thrombotic episodes, and the clinical setting. They should look for an underlying abnormality in patients who develop thrombosis while using OCs. If thrombosis develops during pregnancy, physicians should call for a venogram, venous duplex scanning, and, if required, invasive tests. The most sensible treatment is intravenous heparin for 5-7 days then therapeutic doses of heparin. Heparin therapy should stop before delivery and be reinstituted shortly thereafter and continued throughout the postpartum period. Physicians should take extra precautions when performing surgery on an OC user.
...
PMID:Recent advances in understanding clotting and evaluating patients with recurrent thrombosis. 141 44
Lupus
anticoagulants (LA) are acquired inhibitors of coagulation related to the antiphospholipid antibodies. Paradoxically, these anticoagulants do not expose patients to the risk of hemorrhage but, on the contrary, to a thrombotic risk. The association in a patient of an antiphospholipid antibody and a clinical manifestation (thrombosis or equivalent) defines the antiphospholipid syndrome. This syndrome is termed primary or secondary according to whether it appears as an isolated disorder or is associated with an identified disease, frequently autoimmune (systemic
lupus
erythematous or
lupus
related syndrome). Clinical complications of LA are arterial or venous thrombosis at various sites. They are frequently recurrent, and
deep venous thrombosis
of leg, oculo-cerebral ischemic lesions and heart valve complications have all been well documented. Thrombosis of the microcirculation can cause tissue or organ disfunction, the most characteristic effect being repeated abortions. Laboratory demonstration of LA is difficult when the inhibitor is weak, and this should be completed by tests for other antiphospholipid antibodies. Clinical studies are necessary to assess the thrombotic risk of the LA in different clinical conditions and to evaluate the need and type of antithrombotic treatment. The LA are heterogeneous and only a small proportion of patients with LA will develop thrombosis. New tests capable of predicting the thrombotic risk, bases on the physiopathological mechanisms with which LA interfere in vivo, are currently being investigated.
...
PMID:[Circulating lupus coagulants. A paradox in vascular pathology]. 143 3
Antiphospholipid syndrome (APS) is an entity characterized by recurrent thrombotic events and may occur spontaneously or in the context of
systemic lupus erythematosus
(
SLE
). We describe an English Canadian family in whom the propositus, a woman with Graves' disease and
SLE
, was found to have a
lupus
anticoagulant and anticardiolipin antibody (aCL). A brother with
deep vein thrombosis
, pulmonary emboli, bilateral adrenal hemorrhage and thrombocytopenia, circulating anticoagulant and aCL had a positive antinuclear antibody and Coombs' test, but no other features of
SLE
. Fourteen members of 3 generations of this family underwent clinical assessments, serological testing and HLA typing. The propositus' mother had a family history of autoimmune thyroid disease and the father had aCL, but was asymptomatic. The thyroid disease and the
SLE
were associated with HLA-B8, DR3 haplotype. The aCL and the anticoagulant were associated with HLA-B60, DR4 haplotype. Both these haplotypes were present in the propositus. Among the other 4 carriers of the haplotype B60, DR4, 3 demonstrated significant titers of aCL. Our findings support the reported association between APS and the HLA haplotype DR4 in patients of English descent with
SLE
.
...
PMID:A family study of the antiphospholipid syndrome associated with other autoimmune diseases. 143 7
The overall incidence per year of
deep vein thrombosis
is about one per thousand, but may be much higher in the presence of certain clinical risk factors such as advanced age, immobilization, surgical procedures, pregnancy, puerperium, use of oral contraceptive agents and malignancy. Moreover, homocystinuria, nephrotic syndrome,
systemic lupus erythematosus
and hematological disorders such as paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria or myeloproliferative syndromes predispose to thrombotic disease. Evaluation of the patient with thromboembolism should include detailed history, clinical examination and laboratory investigation to exclude these secondary thrombophilic states. Primary or hereditary thrombophilia is suspected mainly in patients suffering from (venous) thromboembolism at an early age (< 45 years), especially if recurrent and/or familial thrombosis is present. Hereditary thrombophilia may be due to deficiency of antithrombin III, protein C, protein S or plasminogen, some other defects being less well-established prethrombotic risk factors. These currently recognized primary prethrombotic molecular defects are found in 10 to 30% of patients with idiopathic thromboembolism. In the majority of cases the cause of thrombosis remains unknown.
...
PMID:[Evaluating the origin of thrombophilia: indications and implementation]. 148 83
Antiphospholipid antibodies (APA) have been described not only in
systemic lupus erythematosus
but also in several inflammatory diseases of the connective tissue, some infections, neoplasms, in pregnancy and even in apparently healthy individuals. Arterial and venous thrombosis are some of the clinical manifestations most frequently associated with APA. Two patients with ankylosing spondylitis with antiphospholipid antibodies are presented. The first patient developed a infarct in the pons as a complication at 34 years of age, with high titres of anticardiolipin antibodies as the only factor predisposing a cerebral vascular accident. The second patient had
deep vein thrombosis
with the presence of circulating anticoagulant. These are the first cases of antiphospholipid syndrome associated to ankylosing spondylitis in the literature.
...
PMID:[Antiphospholipid syndrome in patients with ankylosing spondylitis. Presentation of 2 cases]. 156 71
An inherited deficiency of protein C, a recognized hypercoagulable state, may cause a clinically significant
deep venous thrombosis
. Only some persons with a deficiency of protein C experience thrombosis, and almost always the thrombotic event occurs in the venous circulation. Warfarin-induced skin necrosis, a rare event observed in some patients soon after treatment with warfarin is begun, is believed to be another manifestation of this deficiency. We describe a young woman whose basal functional and antigenic levels of protein C were about 45% and who experienced both
deep venous thrombosis
and warfarin-induced skin necrosis in a clinically severe course. Evidence for
lupus
anticoagulants was present, with prolonged activated partial thromboplastin time that was corrected when lysed platelets were added, prolonged Russell's viper venom time, anticardiolipin antibodies, and other laboratory evidence.
Lupus
anticoagulants are associated also with a significant incidence of thrombosis, including arterial thrombosis, and this patient developed concurrently arterial thrombosis. The combined effects of protein C deficiency and
lupus
anticoagulants, exacerbated by other potentially thrombogenic conditions, are believed responsible for the severe thrombotic events experienced by this patient.
...
PMID:Concurrent protein C deficiency and lupus anticoagulants. 156 44
This study assessed the efficacy and safety of increasing durations of constant-dose intravenous recombinant tissue-type plasminogen activator (rt-PA) in the treatment of
deep vein thrombosis
. Patients with venogram-documented proximal lower limb (popliteal, iliofemoral) or upper limb (axillary, subclavian) thrombi were given an initial 2-hour rt-PA infusion at 4 micrograms/kg/min, followed by a maintenance infusion of 1 microgram/kg/min for an additional 4, 22, or 33 hours (mean total rt-PA dosages of 54, 127, and 185 mg). A new quantitative venogram scoring system was applied to the study, based on measurements of thrombus volume before and after completion of treatment. Whereas none of the seven patients given treatment for 6 hours and only one of four given treatment for 24 hours showed significant lysis, four of seven who received a prolonged infusion for 35 hours showed lysis of more than 40% of the original thrombus. Overall, the prolonged 35-hour infusion induced 51% lysis of original thrombus, representing a thrombus volume of 16.7 ml dissolved. Hemorrhagic complications were common in all three groups, with four of 18 patients having significant bleeding, including one massive gastrointestinal hemorrhage, two patients with a decrease in hematocrit of more than 10%, and one patient with an intracranial hemorrhage who recovered completely. Pharmacokinetics of the rt-PA showed a steady state antigen concentration of 240 ng/ml and activity of 200 IU/ml during the initial 2-hour infusion and a postinfusion half-life of 5 minutes. Plasma fibrinogen concentrations decreased to approximately 40% to 50% of initial values with all three treatment regimens, but the nadir fibrinogen concentrations did not correlate with either therapeutic efficacy or bleeding complications. One patient with
systemic lupus erythematosus
had an unusual allergic reaction that manifested primarily as angioedema. This study suggests that rt-PA infusion of 35 hours induces greater thrombolysis of
deep vein thrombosis
than does a shorter course of 6 or 24 hours, without an increase in hemorrhagic complications.
...
PMID:Comparison of dosage schedules of rt-PA in the treatment of proximal deep vein thrombosis. 158 98
A previously healthy 16-year-old girl complaining of fever, hemosputum, chest pain and dyspnea was hospitalized. On admission, physical examination revealed mental confusion, holosystolic heart murmur, and swelling of the left foot. Laboratory investigations showed anemia, leukocytosis, thrombocytopenia, activation of inflammatory reactions, prolongation of PT and APTT, and hypoxia. Antinuclear antibody test was negative. There were no other findings suggestive of collagen diseases such as
SLE
. Chest X-ray showed consolidation in the left lower lung field and pleural effusion. Echocardiography disclosed a mass lesion in the left atrium in contact with the mitral valve, and mitral regurgitation. No findings indicative of an infectious etiology were present. The patient rapidly improved with high dose corticosteroid and anticoagulant therapy. A venogram of the lower extremity disclosed
deep venous thrombosis
. A lung ventilation-perfusion scan revealed multiple pulmonary thromboemboli. Elevation of anticardiolipin antibody was noted. Based on these findings, the diagnosis of primary antiphospholipid syndrome was made. Further administration of steroid and anticoagulant resulted in decrease of the titer of anticardiolipin antibody. This is the second report of primary antiphospholipid syndrome in Japan. The clinical significance of this disease is also discussed.
...
PMID:[A case of primary antiphospholipid syndrome with fever, pulmonary thromboembolism and endocardial lesion]. 162 84
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