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Query: UMLS:C0028754 (obesity)
124,988 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In elderly patients thromboses are especially important because of their frequency and consequences (invalidity) often demanding measures of rehabilitation. In thrombophilia there are prophylactic measures necessary founding upon new perceptions on pathogenesis (vascular wall factors; rheologic and microcirculatory factors and factors of hemostasis: increasing of factor VIII; decreasing of antithrombin III; hypofibrinolysis; increased aggregation of thrombocytes). In prophylaxis you should influence the predisposing factors (hypertension, diabetes, arteriosclerosis, adipositas), use dietetic and hygienic measures and also from the pharmalogical point medicines with complex effect, which not only act on one factor (blood coagulation) like the anticoagulants, but also on other pre-disposing factors; and at the same time activate the fibrinolysis and stop the aggregation of thrombocytes. Thrombolytica should be used in elderly patients with precaution. In hemorrhages in the age especially capillary protecting medicaments should be used to correct the increased fragility of capillaries. Of there is at the some time a arteriosclerosis, hypertension, diabetes mellitus, obesity.
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PMID:[Thromboses and haemorrhages in geriatrics (author's transl)]. 101 38

Factors V, VII, VIII, X, XI, and XII of the coagulation system, platelet count, and antithrombin III levels were assayed in 20 healthy volunteers aged 20-40 years and 61 elderly subjects aged 66-96 years whose skinfold thickness was also measured. Factors XI, XII, and antithrombin III levels tended to increase in women and decrease in men while factors X, VII, and V tended to increase in both males and females with advancing years. No age or sex differences were found in platelet counts or factor VIII levels. Factor VIII levels were inversely correlated with obesity in elderly males (r = -0.56, p < 0.005).
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PMID:The effect of age upon the coagulation system. 421 3

There are no generally accepted units for clotting factors except factor VIII. Results are usually expressed as percentages of the standards used in the assays and standards vary in their potency. Over a six year period, factors V, VII and VIII were measured in over 3000 participants in the Northwick Park Heart Study. Six different standards had to be used. For comparative purposes, all results were expressed in terms of the first standard (71/11). This paper describes how appropriate conversion values were derived. Three different methods were compared. One consisted of the assay of each standard against its replacement. Another was based on the use of a reference plasma spanning the use of two successive standards. The third was a population-based, or epidemiological method using the data from all the participants in the study. This method is based on the assumption that results would be the same in comparable groups of study participants. In order to ensure comparability, personal characteristics which affect clotting factor levels, such as age and degree of obesity, were taken into account. The three methods gave similar results but the population method was, in general, the most satisfactory for factor VIII as well as factors V and VII, and has been adopted for routine use.
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PMID:Common units for clotting factors assayed against different standards. 681 46

The cross-sectional correlates of three hemostatic factors--fibrinogen, factor VII, and factor VIII--were examined in the Cardiovascular Health Study, a population-based cohort study of 5,201 subjects over age 65 years. Subjects were recruited in 1989-1990 in Forsyth County, North Carolina; Sacramento County, California; Washington County, Maryland; and Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. In multivariate linear regression models, cardiac risk factors significantly associated with fibrinogen were current smoking, race, lipids, and white blood count. In women, alcohol use, obesity, physical activity, and insulin level were also significant, while in men hypertension was correlated. The significant correlates of factor VII were lipids and white blood count in men and estrogen use, alcohol use, race, lipids, insulin level, white blood count, and obesity in women. The independent correlates of factor VIII were insulin, glucose, and race in both sexes; low density lipoprotein cholesterol, white blood count, and diuretic use in men; and alcohol use in women. In multivariate models, factors known to be modifiable risk factors for cardiovascular disease accounted for more of the population variance of these hemostatic factors in women than in men, especially for factor VII. The hemostatic factors may mediate some effects of risk factors on disease, and this should be considered in longitudinal studies.
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PMID:Association of fibrinogen and coagulation factors VII and VIII with cardiovascular risk factors in the elderly: the Cardiovascular Health Study. Cardiovascular Health Study Investigators. 865 Dec 28

The European Concerted Action on Thrombosis (ECAT) DVT Study was a collaborative study of preoperative haemostatic tests in prediction of DVT (diagnosed by routine bilateral venography) after elective hip replacement. 480 patients were recruited in 11 centres across Europe. Clinical risk factors were assessed, and stored citrated plasma aliquots were centrally assayed for 29 haemostatic factors according to the ECAT methodology. 120 (32%) of 375 evaluable patients had DVT, and 41 (11%) had proximal DVT. Among clinical variables, DVT was significantly associated with increased age, obesity, and possibly non-use of stockings. Of the 29 haemostatic factors, mean preoperative levels were significantly higher in patients with subsequent DVT (on univariate analyses) for factor VIII activity, prothrombin fragment F1+2, thrombin-antithrombin complexes, and fibrin D-dimer; and significantly lower for APTT and APC sensitivity ratio. Factor V Leiden was also associated with DVT. Most of these variables were also associated with age, while D-dimer was higher in patients with varicose veins. On multivariate analyses including clinical variables, only a shorter APTT (locally but not centrally performed) and APC resistance showed a statistically significant association with DVT. We conclude that (a) DVT is common after elective hip replacement despite prophylaxis; (b) the study provides some evidence that DVT is associated with a preoperative hypercoaguable state; and (c) preoperative haemostatic tests do not add significantly to prediction of DVT from clinical variables, with the possible exception of APC resistance.
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PMID:Prediction of deep vein thrombosis after elective hip replacement surgery by preoperative clinical and haemostatic variables: the ECAT DVT Study. European Concerted Action on Thrombosis. 1040 61

Thirty-eight obese children and adolescents were investigated for a possible relation between cholesterol and markers of platelet activation, endothelial cell dysfunction, and activation of the coagulation system. Soluble P-selectin, von Willebrand factor antigen (vWf-Ag), D-dimer, and prothrombin fragment 1 + 2 (F1 + 2) were determined by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays, and factor VIII coagulant activity (VIIIc) was measured by means of one-stage clotting assay. Cholesterol correlated significantly with log P-selectin (r = 0.43, P = 0.003) and log D-dimer (r = 0.33, P = 0.02). Cholesterol did not correlate with vWf-Ag, factor VIIIc, and F1 + 2. Log P-selectin correlated significantly with log D-dimer (r = 0.42, P = 0.003), which remained significant after adjustment for cholesterol (P = 0.02). Log D-dimer correlated significantly with F1 + 2 (r = 0.38, P = 0.01). Our study demonstrates that, in obese children and adolescents, cholesterol is significantly associated with P-selectin and D-dimer, and suggests an unfavorable intercorrelation between metabolic and hemostatic risk factors for coronary heart disease in childhood obesity.
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PMID:Correlation between cholesterol, soluble P-selectin, and D-dimer in obese children and adolescents. 1113 54

Within the context of a prospective study we investigated the influence of malignant and benign breast disease on the coagulation systems both prior to and after surgery. In addition we also investigated to what extent individual risk factors aid the formation of a thrombophiliac risk profile. Altogether 50 patients with carcinomas of the breast and 12 patients with benign breast disease were included in the study. The coagulation investigations took place prior to surgery and on the 1st, 3rd, 7th and 10th day following the operation. The results have already revealed that prior to surgery a clear activation of the haemostasis takes place among patients with a carcinoma of the breast. When compared to patients with benign breast conditions there was a far greater plasma level of factor VIII vWF, fibrinogen, thrombin-antithrombin III complex, D-dimer fibrin degradation products, tissue-type plasminogen activator and the activity and the antigen of plasminogen activator inhibitor 1. Also during the postoperative period the malignant tumour was a stimulus for additional increased activity of blood coagulation and fibrinolysis. Individual risk factors such as age, menopausal status, obesity and smoking lead to a thrombogenic risk profile which could provide a possible explanation for the observed increased incidence of thrombosis in breast cancer patients. For the clinical work there is a need for intensive pre- and postoperative monitoring in the cases of patients with malignant tumours including angiological examinations, intensive physiotherapy and a risk-adapted prophylactic anticoagulation.
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PMID:Perioperative development of a thrombogenic risk profile in patients with carcinomas of the breast: a cause of increased thrombosis. 1121 10

Many acquired risk factors may be identified to avoid the scholarly nature of these interminable lists, they may be reclassified with respect to their originality or their mechanism of action and those of current interest, whose data is still often hypothetical but recent, can be underlined. The following order may be proposed: risk factors which cannot be changed: age (which remains the principal factor) and gender (women being at higher risk than men); true acquired risk factors such as cancer, dysimmune conditions (more specifically, the antiphospholipid syndrome) and hormone replacement therapy (oestroprogestative contraception which has been updated by the debate about "third generation pills" and the risk related to progesterone-like substances themselves; hormone replacement therapy of the menopause which still has no clinical trials to assess "our" forms with natural hormones administered transdermally or transmucosally). Smoking has also been accused of being a risk factor for venous thrombosis in the latest clinical trials. Metabolic factors increase the risk of thrombosis: this is established for obesity, still suspected for hyperhomocystonaemia, the abnormalities being the result of complex gene-environment interactions. Other dysmetabolic conditions (diabetes, hypercholesterolaemia, hypertriglyceridaemia), responsible for arterial complications, are not clearly related to increased venous thromboembolic risk although a preventive effect of statins (yet another I) has just been reported. Similarly to these metabolic factors, the origin of which, genetic or environmental, is difficult to establish, interest has recently been shown in quantitative and functional changes in blood clotting factors. This has been established for arterial disease for fibrinogen but, in addition to this factor which slightly increases the risk of venous thrombosis, increases of factor VIII independent of inflammatory conditions, of blood group and Von Willebrand factor, which all influence the level of factor VIII, an increase by 150% of the normal increases the risk of venous thromboembolic disease by 3 or 4 times. As for factor VIII, increases in factor IX, factor XI, and resistance to activated C protein (independently of the Leiden mutation on the gene for factor V), are also associated in increased venous thromboembolic risk. Without knowing into which category to classify them, previous personal and family history of thromboembolic disease, in the absence of the already mentioned hereditary risk factors, must be noted. Finally, amongst the acquired risk factors, the authors also list conditions of blood stasis and vascular lesions with or without hypercoagulability (surgery, prolonged hospital stays, cardiac failure, paralysis, pregnancy...). Of these acquired conditions which increase the risk of thrombotic complications, particular attention has been given over the last few years to forced immobilisation in uncomfortable positions as in certain forms of transport. Although clinical reports have discordant results, it would seem that the risk is increased and the benefits of supportive elastic stockings have been confirmed. If the acquired risk is identified and quantified for a patient, it allows evaluation of global risk and the installation of appropriate therapeutic measures.
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PMID:[Venous thromboembolic pathology. New acquired risk factors or new data on acquired risk factors]. 1179 76

Published and unpublished spontaneously reported thrombotic adverse events (AEs) in factor VIII inhibitor bypass activity (FEIBA(R)) recipients were compiled for the most recent 10-year period during which FEIBA(R) units equivalent to 3.95 x 105 typical infusions were distributed worldwide. A total of 16 thrombotic AEs were documented over the 10-year period, corresponding to an incidence of 4.05 per 105 infusions (95% CI, 2.32-6.58 per 105 infusions). Disseminated intravascular coagulation (n=7) and myocardial infarction (n=5) were the most frequent thrombotic AEs. One fatality occurred in an 87-year-old metastatic cancer patient. In 13/16 (81%) patients known risk factors were present, most commonly FEIBA(R) overdose in 8/16 (50%), obesity in 3/16 (19%) and serum lipid abnormalities in 2/16 (12%). These findings indicate that thrombotic AEs in FEIBA(R) recipients are very rare. Recognition of risk factors and avoidance of FEIBA(R) overdosage may avert thrombotic AEs.
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PMID:Safety of factor VIII inhibitor bypass activity (FEIBA): 10-year compilation of thrombotic adverse events. 1195 42

Obese patients are at risk for the development of cardiovascular diseases, which can in part be explained by disturbances in the haemostatic and fibrinolytic systems. Indeed, obese subjects tend to have higher values of fibrinogen, factor VII, factor VIII, von Willebrand factor and plasminogen activator inhibitor compared to non-obese subjects. Abdominal obesity, in particular, has been shown to be associated with disturbances in fibrinogen, factor VIII and von Willebrand factor, while less consistent results have been found for factor VII. Recently it has been demonstrated that the adipocyte itself is able to produce plasminogen activator inhibitor-1, possibly explaining the high levels found in obesity. Different studies have investigated the association between haemostatic and fibrinolytic parameters and the insulin resistance syndrome, often present in obese subjects. Fibrinogen has been found to be related to insulin, but it has been suggested that this relationship is not independent of the accompanying inflammatory reaction. Results from studies on the relationship between insulin resistance and factor VII, factor VIII and von Willebrand factor levels are inconsistent. In contrast, plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 has been found to correlate with all components of the insulin resistance syndrome, and can be considered as a true component of this metabolic syndrome. Weight loss seems to have a beneficial effect on factor VII--probably mediated through a reduction in triglycerides. Data on factor VIII and von Willebrand factor are scarce but weight loss does not seem to have an effect. Fibrinogen does not seem to be reduced by modest weight loss and a more substantial weight loss seems necessary to lower fibrinogen levels. In contrast, both modest and substantial weight loss have been found to significantly reduce plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 levels. In conclusion, the increased cardiovascular risk observed in obesity could in part be explained by the association between insulin resistance and components of the fibrinolytic and haemostatic systems. Whether this relationship is truly causal or indirect needs to be elucidated further.
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PMID:Obesity, haemostasis and the fibrinolytic system. 1212 Apr 24


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