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Query: UMLS:C0026764 (
multiple myeloma
)
36,148
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
avWD is a rare entity that is primarily associated with lymphoproliferative disorders, most commonly with
multiple myeloma
, lymphoma, and the myeloproliferative diseases. Various pathogenetic mechanisms have been postulated. The most commonly seen is antibodies directed against the FVIII complex, resulting in either its accelerated destruction or its accelerated clearance by the reticuloendothelial system. There may be immunoadsorption of the FVIII complexes onto the clones of malignant cells, as has been reported in several cases, or proteolysis may be causing the peripheral destruction of the FVIII complex. Lastly, as seen in hypothyroidism, global decrease in production of the multimers also results in avWD. The treatment, in general, should be aimed at controlling the underlying disorder and at stopping any life-threatening hemorrhage. The treatment includes any or all of the following: DDAVP, cryoprecipitate, FVIII concentrates, extracorporeal immunoadsorption, and chemotherapy as needed to control the underlying disorders. The screening tests that will allow for the detection of the avWD include measurement of the bleeding time, the FVIII:C, FVIII:vWF, and the FVIII:RCoF. FVIII:C inhibitors can be demonstrated by mixing the patient plasma with normal plasma. A normal prothrombin time (PT), activated partial
thromboplastin
time (APTT), and thrombin time (TT) are expected. Clinically, these patients present with mucosal bleeding, and in avWD tend to have an association with lymphoproliferative malignancies. They tend to be elderly patients with no prior history of bleeding diathesis and to have negative family histories for coagulopathies. Further study of these patients is warranted, because this disorder appears to have a multifactorial etiology. Increasing our understanding of avWD may increase our understanding of congenital vWD, thus allowing us to more effectively treat all patients with von Willebrand's disease.
...
PMID:Acquired von Willebrand's disease. 145 20
Of 42 purified human
myeloma
proteins tested, two (IgG3 Her and IgM Mag) were found to possess strong lupus anticoagulant (LA) and anti-cephalin activity, as assessed by a dilute activated partial
thromboplastin
time (dAPTT) and ELISA test, respectively. For these proteins, we confirmed the observation reported by others that LA activity is present in the antigen-binding (Fab) portion of the immunoglobulin molecule. Rabbit anti-idiotype antibodies against IgG3 Her inhibited the anti-cephalin activity of this protein, suggesting that the anti-cephalin activity of IgG3 Her depends on the hypervariable part of the immunoglobulin and thus most probably is a true antigen-antibody reaction. The anti-Her idiotype antibodies were also able to bind to and inhibit the anti-cephalin activity of IgM Mag. ELISA binding and inhibition experiments showed that the anti-idiotype antiserum contained at least two sets of anti-idiotypes; one set that recognizes a cross-reactive idiotype shared by IgG3 Her and IgM Mag, and another set that seems to be unique to the immunizing protein IgG3 Her. Both sets of anti-idiotype antibodies also bound weakly to polyclonal (patient) IgG, indicating an idiotypic cross reaction.
...
PMID:Shared idiotypic determinant in mono- and polyclonal anti-phospholipid antibodies with lupus anticoagulant activity. 190 96
In three patients with monoclonal gammopathies: a case of
multiple myeloma
, a case of monoclonal gammopathy of uncertain significance (MGUS) and a case of monoclonal gammopathy associated with lymphocytic lymphoma, we found the presence of a circulating lupus-like anticoagulant. Coagulative studies showed that the paraproteins: an IgG3k, an IgG1k and an IgMlambda, were responsible for the anticoagulant activity by interacting with the
thromboplastin
phospholipids. Using isoelectrofocusing we demonstrated that the three monoclonal immunoglobulins had a strong basic charge which may have contributed to determining their interaction with the acidic
thromboplastin
phospholipids. The binding of various phospholipids to the monoclonal proteins was assessed by the fluorescence quenching method which showed heterogeneous specificity. In order to establish whether the electrical charge is also relevant in cases with polyclonal lupus anticoagulant, the polyclonal immunoglobulins were fractionated according to their charge. The strongest inhibitor activity was found in the most basic immunoglobulins. Monoclonal lupus-like anticoagulants represent useful tools for investigating the heterogeneous world of polyclonal lupus-like anticoagulants.
...
PMID:Study of three patients with monoclonal gammopathies and 'lupus-like' anticoagulants. 251 Aug 15
A 58-year-old black woman with IgD
multiple myeloma
developed a hemorrhagic diathesis within 48 hours after receiving mithramycin (20 micrograms/kg/day) for therapy of hypercalcemia. Her coagulation studies were characterized by prolonged prothrombin, partial
thromboplastin
, thrombin, and reptilase clotting times. Her plasma and partially purified fibrinogen were inhibitory to the clotting of normal plasma and fibrinogen. The patient's isolated fibrinogen showed a normal rate of fibrinopeptide release, but her fibrin monomer aggregation was markedly abnormal. These studies document the development of a dysfibrinogenemia secondary to mithramycin toxicity.
...
PMID:Acquired dysfibrinogenemia secondary to mithramycin toxicity. 294 Aug 61
Infected patients with hematological disorders were treated with the combination of cefmenoxime (CMX) and cefsulodin (CFS). This therapy was done on 74 patients, of whom 38 (51%) had acute myelocytic leukemia, 14 (19%) malignant lymphoma, 7 (9%) acute lymphocytic leukemia, 5 aplastic anemia, 4 adult T cell leukemia, 4 chronic myelocytic leukemia, 1
multiple myeloma
and 1 histiocytic medullary reticulosis. Complicated infections included 5 cases of septicemia, 41 cases of suspected septicemia, 19 cases of respiratory tract infection, 2 with anal abscess, 1 with urinary tract infection and others. The obtained results were as follows: Clinical effectiveness of the combination therapy was excellent in 17 cases (23.0%), good in 24 (32.4%) and poor in 33 (44.6%). Total clinical efficacy rate was 55.4%. Clinical efficacy rate was 40% against septicemias, 51.2% against suspected septicemias and 57.9% against respiratory tract infections. Causative pathogens were isolated in only 21 cases (28.4%): Gram-positive bacteria in 9 cases, Gram-negative bacteria in 11 and fungus in 1. About half of the Gram-negative bacteria belonged to Pseudomonas sp. The efficacy rate of this combination therapy against Gram-negative bacterial infections was 72.7% but the rate against Gram-positive bacterial infections were only 33.3%. Only in 1 case, this combination therapy was discontinued because of drug eruption. Abnormal laboratory findings were observed in 5 cases: Elevation of BUN in 3, GOT and GPT in 1 and prolongation of activated partial
thromboplastin
time in 1. In conclusion, this combination therapy of CMX and CFS is useful and safe against infections complicated by hematological disorders.
...
PMID:[Clinical evaluation of a combination therapy using cefmenoxime and cefsulodin on infections complicated by hematological disorders. Tohkai Research Group on Infections in Hematopoietic Disorders]. 348 23
A 54-year-old man with
plasma cell myeloma
had sustained bleeding develop after prophylactic hip hemiarthroplasty. Routine coagulation studies revealed significant prolongation of the prothrombin time, activated partial
thromboplastin
time, and thrombin time. Further evaluation showed failure of the activated partial
thromboplastin
time to correct in a 1:1 mixture with pooled normal plasma, correction of the prolonged thrombin time by addition of protamine, and a normal reptilase time. A purified preparation of the immunoglobulin component of patient plasma produced the same pattern of coagulation abnormalities, suggesting the paraprotein possessed heparin-like anticoagulant activity. This appears to be a rare mechanism of bleeding diathesis in
plasma cell myeloma
.
...
PMID:Heparin-like anticoagulant associated with plasma cell myeloma. 392 25
We investigated a patient with a long-standing IgGkappa monoclonal gammopathy who developed severe haemorrhagic complications. At IgG concentrations of approximately 50g/l the patient had severe bleeding associated with prolongation of the thrombin time, activated partial
thromboplastin
time, and reptilase time. Plasmapheresis resulted in improvement in the thrombin time and resolution of bleeding. Depletion of the IgG by absorption of plasma with protein G-Sepharose in vitro resulted in normalization of the thrombin time and reptilase time. The purified IgG bound to immobilized thrombin and immunoprecipitated human alpha-, beta- and gamma-thrombin but not prothrombin, other vitamin K-dependent coagulation factors, or fibrinogen. Purified IgG at concentrations >1 x 10(-2) g/l decreased (approximately 50%) the rate of hydrolysis of a chromogenic substrate by thrombin. Addition of purified IgG to normal pooled plasma at concentrations >1 x 10(-2) g/l prolonged the thrombin time and activated partial
thromboplastin
time, but the reptilase time was prolonged only at IgG concentrations >1 g/l. This finding suggests that at low concentrations the IgG produces a specific antithrombin effect, but at higher concentrations it also affects fibrin polymerization; the combination of these effects probably produced clinical bleeding. This is the first report of a monoclonal antithrombin antibody associated with bleeding in a patient with
multiple myeloma
.
...
PMID:Identification of a monoclonal thrombin inhibitor associated with multiple myeloma and a severe bleeding disorder. 913 69
A patient with newly diagnosed
multiple myeloma
manifested by urine kappa light-chain excretion and a small monoclonal spike (0.4 g/dl), presented with lower extremity deep venous thrombosis. A preheparin plasma-activated partial
thromboplastin
time (aPTT) was prolonged at 68 sec (normal control 26-42 sec). Additional studies confirmed the presence of lupus anticoagulant activity in the serum: the modified Russell Viper Venom Time (MRVVT) was 73 sec (normal control 24-42 sec) and with a 50:50 mix of the patient's plasma and pooled normal plasma, the MRVVT remained prolonged. Kappa light chains (LC) were isolated from the patient's urine and their purity confirmed by electrophoresis and immunofixation using specific immunoglobulin antisera. The patient's LC mixed with pooled normal plasma demonstrated LA activity by in vitro clotting tests (plasma-activated partial
thromboplastin
time 62 sec, with normal control of 45 sec), MRVVT of 44 sec with normal control of 35 sec. Purified urinary kappa light chains from a control patient with
multiple myeloma
and normal clotting studies, failed to prolong either the plasma-activated partial
thromboplastin
time or the MRVVT. We hypothesize that kappa LC in our patient demonstrated LA activity, which was unique to these LCs. Paraproteins with LA activity, to date, have included only intact immunoglobulins (Ig). While intact Ig paraproteins have been reported to possess LA activity, this is the first report to our knowledge of light-chain paraproteins possessing similar activity and resulting in clinically evident thrombosis. Light chain paraproteins could serve as useful models for further study of the mechanisms of activity of acquired LA inhibitors.
...
PMID:Light-chain paraproteins with lupus anticoagulant activity. 1050 4
Prothrombin is the precursor of thrombin, a central enzyme in coagulation. Autoantibodies to prothrombin are associated with thromboembolism, but the mechanisms by which the antibodies modulate the coagulation processes are not understood. We screened a panel of 34 monoclonal antibody light chains isolated from patients with
multiple myeloma
for
prothrombinase
activity by an electrophoresis method. Two light chains with the activity were identified, and one of the light chains was characterized further. The
prothrombinase
activity eluted from a gel-filtration column run in denaturing solvent (6 M guanidine hydrochloride) at the characteristic positions of the light chain dimer and monomer. A constant level of catalytic activity was observed across the width of the light chain monomer peak, assessed as the cleavage of IEGR-methylcoumarinamide, a peptide substrate corresponding to residues 268-271 of prothrombin. Hydrolysis of this peptide by the light chain was saturable and consistent with Michaelis-Menten-Henri kinetics (K(m) 103 microM; k(cat) of 2.62 x 10(-)(2)/min). Four cleavage sites in prothrombin were identified by N-terminal sequencing of the fragments: Arg(155)-Ser(156), Arg(271)-Thr(272), Arg(284)-Thr(285), and Arg(393)-Ser(394). The light chain did not cleave radiolabeled albumin, thyroglobulin, and annexin V under conditions that readily permitted detectable prothrombin cleavage. Two prothrombin fragments (M(r) 55 000 and 38 000), were isolated by anion-exchange chromatography and were observed to cleave a thrombin substrate, tosyl-GPR-nitroanilide. Conversion of fibrinogen to fibrin was accelerated by the prothrombin fragments generated by the light chain. These finding suggest a novel mechanism whereby antibodies can induce a procoagulant state, i.e., prothrombin activation via cleavage of the molecule.
...
PMID:Monoclonal antibody light chain with prothrombinase activity. 1082 60
A monoclonal IgG isolated from a patient with
multiple myeloma
has been shown to bind to exosite II of thrombin, prolong both the thrombin time and the activated partial
thromboplastin
time (aPTT) when added to normal plasma, and alter the kinetics of hydrolysis of synthetic peptide substrates. Although the IgG does not affect cleavage of fibrinogen by thrombin, it increases the rate of inhibition of thrombin by purified antithrombin approximately 3-fold. Experiments with plasma immunodepleted of antithrombin or heparin cofactor II confirm that prolongation of the thrombin time requires antithrombin. By contrast, prolongation of the aPTT requires neither antithrombin nor heparin cofactor II. The IgG delays clotting of plasma initiated by purified factor IXa but has much less of an effect on clotting initiated by
factor Xa
. In a purified system, the IgG decreases the rate of activation of factor VIII by thrombin. These studies indicate that binding of a monoclonal IgG to exosite II prolongs the thrombin time indirectly by accelerating the thrombin-antithrombin reaction and may prolong the aPTT by interfering with activation of factor VIII, thereby diminishing the catalytic activity of the factor IXa/VIIIa complex.
...
PMID:Anticoagulant activities of a monoclonal antibody that binds to exosite II of thrombin. 1145 88
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