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Query: UMLS:C0038454 (stroke)
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Ischemic optic neuropathy and retinal arterial occlusion are 2 forms of arterial occlusive disease affecting the eye. Reports in the literature suggest platelet hyperactivity in acute arterial occlusive diseases affecting other organ systems. Therefore, 14 patients with ischemic optic neuropathy and 17 patients with central or branch retinal artery occlusion were studied to determine whether platelets have a role in the pathogenesis of these vascular occlusive disorders. The results of the following investigations were no different in these patients compared with those in 18 control patients with non-vascular eye diseases: prothrombin times, partial thromboplastin times, plasma fibrinogen, factor V, factor VIII, platelet counts and threshold concentrations of ADP, epinephrine and collagen resulting in secondary platelet aggregation and serotonin release. In contrast, platelet coagulant activities concerned with the early stages of intrinsic coagulation were significantly increased in patients with retinal artery occlusion without hypertension or type IV hyperlipoproteinemia, but generally normal in patients with ischemic optic neuropathy and in patients with retinal artery occlusion associated with hypertension, type IV hyperlipoproteinemia, diabetes mellitus and generalized atherosclerosis. These results are consistent with a platelet contribution to retinal arterial occlusive disease in patients without other known contributing factors such as hypertension, serum lipid abnormalities, diabetes mellitus and generalized atherosclerosis and may have implications regarding prophylaxis.
Stroke
PMID:Platelet coagulant activities in arterial occlusive disease of the eye. 50 1

Studies of 11 patients with haemorrhagic stroke revealed no significant change in kaolin cephalin clotting time, prothrombin time, thrombin time, PF 3 availability, platelet count and factor V and VIII during the first week. Plasma fibrinogen was significantly increased while factors VII + X were decreased (borderline significance). Prolongation of plasma recalcification time and decrease in heparin tolerance reached borderline significance. There was moderate, but significant, increase in serum antithrombin activity and plasma (euglobulin fraction) fibrinolytic activity.
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PMID:Blood coagulation and fibrinolysis in haemorrhagic stroke. 58 May 8

The study objective was to describe the clinical, biologic, and hemodynamic features of adult overwhelming meningococcal purpura and to examine the prognostic factors by multivariate analysis at the time of admission to the intensive care unit. Thirty-five patients (greater than or equal to 13 years of age) with meningococcal infection, circulatory shock, and generalized purpuric lesions of abrupt onset were recorded in eight intensive care units from 1977 to 1989. The patients were young (mean age, 26.6 years; range, 13 to 68 years) and had been previously healthy. The female-to-male ratio was 3:1. Mortality was 54.3%, with most deaths occurring within the first 48 hours, usually secondary to irreversible shock with multiple organ failure. Ischemic complications (eight cases), prolonged heart failure (seven cases), and secondary septicemia (five cases) were the chief complications among survivors. Initial hemodynamic study after volume loading showed low stroke volume index (mean +/- SD, 29.4 +/- 13 mL/m2) and tachycardia (mean +/- SD, 138 +/- 16 beats per minute), a profile suggesting a greater myocardial depression than usually observed in gram-negative bacillary septic shock. Univariate prognostic analysis showed that four variables at the time of admission were associated with fatal outcome: a plasma fibrinogen level of 1.5 g/L or less, a factor V concentration of 0.20 or less, a platelet count lower than 80 x 10(9)/L, and a cerebrospinal fluid leukocyte count of 20 x 10(6)/L or less. Stepwise regression analysis showed that low fibrinogen level (less than or equal to 1.5 g/L) was the sole adverse prognostic variable (odds ratio = 2, 95% confidence interval, 1.5 to 2.7). Adult overwhelming meningococcal purpura is still associated with high mortality and morbidity. Low fibrinogen level at time of admission may permit early recognition of the most severely ill patients.
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PMID:Adult overwhelming meningococcal purpura. A study of 35 cases, 1977-1989. 199 58

An analysis was made of 41 cases of disseminated intravascular coagulation in dogs, with the objective of evaluating routine and nonroutine laboratory tests used in making the diagnosis. The dogs were grouped on the basis of underlying disease, which included neoplasia (39%), pancreatitis (30%), chronic active hepatitis (15%), heat stroke (12%), and sepsis (4%). Of the diagnostic tests evaluated, those for determination of activated partial thromboplastin time, antithrombin III activity, prothrombin time, and the platelet count were the most valuable. Of the clotting factors, factor V activity was decreased more frequently than the activity of factor VIII:C (factor VIII: procoagulant). The factor VIII:C activity was in conflict with prevailing dogma that reflects depression of this factor in disseminated intravascular coagulation. Factor VIII:C activity was decreased in only 29% of dogs studied. Activation of the fibrinolytic system was manifested by decreased plasminogen activity in 49% of the dogs studied. Sixty-one percent of the dogs had increased amounts of fibrin (ogen) degradation products.
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PMID:Disseminated intravascular coagulation: antithrombin, plasminogen, and coagulation abnormalities in 41 dogs. 726 67

The point mutation Arg506- > Gln of factor V was recently shown to be an important and relatively common genetic cause of venous thromboembolism. Using a DNA technique based on polymerase chain reaction, we surveyed the blood samples of 236 patients with ischaemic stroke or a transient ischaemic attack, 122 survivors of myocardial infarction and 137 control subjects for the presence of this mutation. Although the frequency of the factor V mutation in patients with arterial disease (4.5%) was not significantly different from that in healthy blood donors (2.9%), a carrier status for this mutant gene was associated with symptoms of migraine and relatively mild angiographic abnormalities among patients with cerebrovascular disease. A more extensive study addressing the occurrence and significance of the mutant factor V mutation in patients with vasospastic cerebrovascular diseases seems to be warranted.
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PMID:Arg506Gln factor V mutation (factor V Leiden) in patients with ischaemic cerebrovascular disease and survivors of myocardial infarction. 749 58

To determine the prevalence of the factor V Leiden gene mutation in relation to the phenotypes of cerebral infarction and cerebral hemorrhage, we studied 386 randomly selected cases of acute stroke and 247 control subjects. Factor V genotype was determined by amplification of a 267-bp sequence of exon/intron 10 of the factor V gene. Levels of prothrombin fragment F(1 + 2), a marker of thrombin generation, were determined in both acute and convalescent stroke and related to factor V genotype. Prothrombin fragment F(1 + 2) was assessed by using an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. Sixteen stroke cases (4.1%) were identified as having the mutation compared with 14 (5.6%) control subjects. Prothrombin fragment F(1 + 2) levels were estimated in 191 cases and found to be elevated both acutely and after 3 months, but they were not related to factor V genotype. Prothrombin fragment F(1 + 2) is elevated in acute stroke and requires further evaluation in relation to cerebrovascular disease. These results suggest that the factor V Leiden gene mutation is not a risk factor for arterial thrombosis causing stroke.
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PMID:Factor V Leiden gene mutation and thrombin generation in relation to the development of acute stroke. 777 34

Haemostatic measurements were undertaken in 132 patients diagnosed with heat stroke during the pilgrimage to Makkah, in two successive summers of 1989-90. The control group comprised 49 patients, all pilgrims, with a wide range of clinical conditions, but without hyperpyrexia or deranged haemostasis. Heat stroke patients showed (i) significant prolongation of the prothrombin (PT), activated partial thromboplastin (aPTT) and thrombin times (TT) but normal reptilase time (RT); (ii) significant reduction in plasma levels of antithrombin III (AT-III), factor V, proteins C and S, plasminogen activator inhibitor (PAI) and platelet count; (iii) increase in plasma factor VIII, tissue plasminogen activator (t-PA) and serum FDP; (iv) no significant changes in plasma fibrinogen, plasminogen, alpha 2-antiplasmin and factors VII and X. Heat stroke patients were then grouped into those with and those without bleeding symptoms. Bleeders showed greater prolongation of the PT, aPTT and TT and significant reductions in fibrinogen, AT-III, factors V, VIII and X, plasminogen, alpha 2-antiplasmin and platelet count. Logistic regression and discriminant analysis showed that AT-III was the parameter associated most with heat stroke and reliable enough to predict its occurrence, whether or not bleeding occurred. The results indicate that activation of the haemostatic mechanism, consumptive in nature, regularly accompanies heat stroke and highlights the physiological role of AT-III in checking this activation process.
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PMID:The coagulopathy of heat stroke: alterations in coagulation and fibrinolysis in heat stroke patients during the pilgrimage (Haj) to Makkah. 786 79

APC resistance, due to a point mutation in factor V at amino acid position Arg506, has been identified as a major cause of inherited thrombophilia. Here we report the presence of the factor V Arg506-->Gln mutation in 2 Italian families. In 1 family 3 subjects heterozygous and 2 subjects homozygous for the factor V Arg506-->Gln mutation were identified. The only subject who developed a thrombotic event was a 20-yr-old girl who was found to be homozygous for the factor V Arg506-->Gln mutation. In the second family 10 subjects were identified to be heterozygous for the factor V Arg506-->Gln mutation; among them 2 developed a thrombotic event. In the same family 2 individuals were found to be homozygous for the mutation: the first had a myocardial infarction at age 25 yr and the second suffered from multiple episodes of deep venous thrombosis and had a stroke at age 24 yr. These data show that the risk of developing deep venous thrombosis for the carriers of the factor V Arg506-->Gln mutation is high in the families investigated. Furthermore our data imply that the factor V Arg506-->Gln mutation in its homozygous form may relate to myocardial infarction and stroke.
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PMID:Arterial and venous thrombosis in two Italian families with the factor V Arg506-->Gln mutation. 869 38

Carbohydrate-deficient glycoprotein (CDG) syndrome type I is an autosomal recessive disease with multisystemic manifestations. During childhood the patients may suffer from hemorrhages, which may be lethal, venous thromboses and stroke-like episodes. In this study 15 patients with CDG syndrome type I were examined from the levels and isoform patterns of coagulation factors and inhibitors and fibrinolysis parameters. The screening assays APTT and PTC were unaffected in most cases. In spite of this reduced levels were found particularly for factors II, V, X and XI and for antithrombin and protein C. Low values tended to be associated with elevated liver enzyme levels in serum. The values were at potential clinical risk levels for protein C and/or antithrombin in more than half of the patients, and for factor V and/or factor XI in one third of them. There were no current differences in values between patients who had previously displayed clinical symptoms of coagulation disturbance and those without such symptoms. Partially carbohydrate-deficient isoforms were demonstrated in antithrombin, protein C, protein S and in alpha 2-antiplasmin, but not in factors II, X and fibrinogen. Abnormal isoforms did not appear to reduce the functional activity of the respective glycoproteins. Analysis of individual hemostatic parameters is recommended in these patients in connection with clinical symptoms or elective surgery. The observed variability of the carbohydrate defect in glycoproteins in this disease may be a clue to its pathogenesis.
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PMID:Complex functional and structural coagulation abnormalities in the carbohydrate-deficient glycoprotein syndrome type I. 873

To assess the risk of thromboembolism in women using oral contraceptives (OCs), we identified through computer search in the hospitals of the province of Parma, Italy, all women aged 15-44 who were resident in the province and had a documented thromboembolic event in the years 1989-93. The number of users and nonusers of OCs was estimated by the drug sale data for the province and by the demographic statistics. In cases with venous thromboembolism (VT) the prevalence of concomitant deficiency of antithrombin III, protein C, protein S, and of factor V gene mutation Arg506GIn was evaluated. The incidence rate of VT was 37/59,603 woman-years in users (0.62 per 1000) and 13/303,954 woman-years in nonusers (0.042 per 1000), for a relative risk (RR) of 14.5 (95% confidence interval: 7.8-27.1; P < 0.001); the rate of stroke per 1000 woman-years was 0.17 in users and 0.036 in nonusers (RR = 4.6; 2.9-10.7; P < 0.01). A congenital thrombophilia involving the protein C anticoagulant system was documented in about 25% of young women developing venous thromboembolism while on OCs.
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PMID:Risk of venous thromboembolism and stroke associated with oral contraceptives. Role of congenital thrombophilias. 883 Dec 53


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