Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0024141 (
systemic lupus erythematosus
)
44,322
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
This review has stressed the common hereditary and acquired blood protein defects associated with thrombosis. The most common of the hereditary defects appear to be antithrombin, protein C, and protein S deficiency, and the most common acquired defects are anticardiolipin antibodies and the
lupus
anticoagulant. Therefore, these are the defects which should first be searched for in an individual with unexplained thrombosis. If these more common defects are not found, the rarer defects, including HC-II, plasminogen, or TPA deficiency, dysfibrinogenemia, elevated PAI-1, or heterozygous
homocystinemia
should be looked for. The incidence of activated protein C co-factor deficiency (APC resistance) is not yet clear but may also represent a common defect. PAI-1 defects may, with time, be shown to be common. Finding these defects has important implications for therapy for the individual patient and for the institution of family studies to identify, inform, and possibly treat others at risk. It is expected that as knowledge of hemostasis expands, more hereditary and acquired defects, such as elevated lipoprotein(a) or defects of extrinsic (tissue factor) pathway inhibitor (EPI, TFPI), may be associated with enhanced risks for thrombosis.
...
PMID:Blood protein defects associated with thrombosis. Laboratory assessment. 778 Dec 75
Primary hypercoagulable states are hereditary disorders that result in arterial and venous thromboses. The purpose of this report is to present three patients with hypercoagulable states, and offer current guidelines for diagnosis and treatment. Primary hypercoagulable disorders such as antithrombin III, protein C and protein S deficiencies, fibrinolytic disorders such as decreased plasminogen levels and plasminogen activator deficiency, and antiphospholipid syndromes such as anticariolipin antibody and
lupus
anticoagulants will be reviewed. We will emphasize clinical characteristics that should prompt evaluation for hypercoagulation, appropriate laboratory tests for hypercoagulable disorders, and treatment. Other secondary and recently investigated hypercoagulable disorders, including heparin-associated thrombocytopenia,
homocystinemia
, lipoprotein (a), plasminogen activator inhibitor, and factor V Leiden, will also be reviewed.
...
PMID:The surgical implications of primary hypercoagulable states. 904 71
Maternal hypercoagulability is a possible cause of miscarriage during the eighth and ninth weeks of pregnancy, when the placenta replaces the yolk sac. We thus examined associations between putative markers of an acquired hypercoagulable state and the risk of first miscarriage. We conducted a case-control study comparing 743 women who miscarried in weeks 8 and 9 with 743 women who underwent a first provoked abortion, matched for age, number of pregnancies, and time elapsed since abortion. Levels of plasma homocysteine and of various antiphospholipid/antiprotein and hemostasis-related autoantibodies were categorized in 4 strata (percentiles 1-80, 81-95, 96-99, 100 among control patients) and analyzed in conditional logistic regression models. Pregnancy loss was independently associated with positive
lupus
anticoagulant (matched odds ratio [OR], 2.6; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.1-6.0), high levels of immunoglobulin M (IgM) antibodies against cardiolipin (OR for percentile 100 versus 0-80, 3.5; CI, 1.2-10.1) and against phosphatidylethanolamine (OR, 4.7; CI, 1.9-12.1), high levels of IgG antibodies against annexin V (OR, 3.2; CI, 1.1-9.1) and against tissue-type plasminogen activator (OR, 19.5; CI, 7.9-48.0), and high
homocystinemia
(OR, 4.1; CI, 1.3-12.5). A first early pregnancy loss is associated with increased levels of several autoantibodies and of homocysteine.
...
PMID:Antiphospholipid/antiprotein antibodies, hemostasis-related autoantibodies, and plasma homocysteine as risk factors for a first early pregnancy loss: a matched case-control study. 1286 11