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Query: UMLS:C0038454 (stroke)
147,016 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

More than a dozen primary hematologic disorders have been associated with ischemic stroke. Inherited deficiencies of antithrombin III, protein C, and protein S have been linked with stroke in case reports; optimal screening requires functional as well as antigenic assays. Antiphospholipid antibodies and lupus anticoagulants are the most frequently identified acquired states associated with ischemic stroke. Polycythemia vera, sickle cell anemia, sickle-C disease, and essential thrombocythemia are the major disorders of formed blood elements causing stroke. Special, step-wise screening for occult prothrombotic entities in stroke patients is recommended for young persons with stroke of uncertain cause, for those with prior venous thrombosis, for those with a family history of unusual thrombosis, and for those with no other explanation for recurrent stroke. Acquired, perhaps transient, abnormalities of platelets, coagulation inhibition, and fibrinolysis may contribute importantly to brain ischemia in synergy with other mechanisms, but at present these remain ill-defined. The contribution of prothrombotic diatheses to stroke is probably underrecognized and warrants further investigation.
Stroke 1990 Aug
PMID:Hematologic disorders and ischemic stroke. A selective review. 186 63

A deficiency of free protein S, known to increase the risk of peripheral venous thrombosis, has not been well described in patients with cerebrovascular disease. In a pilot study of 35 patients with symptomatic cerebrovascular disease, using a qualitative crossed immunoelectrophoresis assay we found eight patients with a free protein S deficiency. A Laurell immunoelectrophoresis assay was used to quantify the percentage of free protein S after removal of the inactive protein S C4b-binding protein complex by precipitation with polyethylene glycol 8000. In a quantitative study of 103 patients with cerebrovascular disease, 21 had a free protein S that was less than 20% of the average normal total protein S concentration (normal range 20-40%); 19 had suffered cerebral infarction and the other two had suffered intracranial hemorrhage. The frequency of free protein S deficiency in this group of stroke patients was far higher than the expected prevalence in the general population.
Stroke 1989 Dec
PMID:Free protein S deficiency: a possible association with cerebrovascular occlusion. 253 44

The authors investigated the behaviour of some markers of the haemostatic balance in a group of patients with acute focal cerebral vasculopathy. The series consists of 70 female patients (mean age: 61 +/- 5), 25 of whom suffering from TIA and 45 from thrombotic stroke; 40 normal controls (mean age 43 +/- 5) were also considered. For each patient after an overnight fasting a withdrawal of venous blood was done within 24-36 hours after the admission. For each sample the determination of seven prothrombotic markers [(fibrinogen (F), factor VII (F VII), antithrombin III (AT III), protein C (PC), protein S (PS) (coagulometric method IL), tissue plasminogen activator (t-PA), plasminogen activator inhibitor (PAI-1) (ELISA method Boehringer)] and of three prethrombotic markers [(fibrinopeptide A (FPA), beta-thromboglobulin (BTG) and D-dimer (D-D) (ELISA method, Boehringer)] was performed. The results obtained in the group of the cerebrovasculopathic patients compared to the controls showed a significant increase of F (p < 0.001), F VII (p < 0.005), BTG (p < 0.05) and D-D (p < 0.01), whereas significant differences regarding AT III, PC, PS, t-PA, PAI and FPA were not observed. The authors hypothesized that the increased levels of fibrinogen and factor VII in the cerebrovascular subjects, globally considered, may depend on a marked prothrombotic state, linked in a pathogenetic sense to the vascular disease; the existence of a prethrombotic state is also documented by the increase of betathromboglobulin and D-dimer.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Haemostatic balance in patients with acute focal cerebral vasculopathy. 760 35

We studied a series of hemostasis factors in a group of patients selected from a cohort of 916 patients affected by MI from the GISSI-2 study population. Following a case-control design, 73 patients with a family history of thrombosis (the presence of at least two first degree relatives affected by MI and/or stroke before 65 years) were matched with MI patients with no family history of thrombosis. Blood collection could be performed 6 +/- 1 months after the acute phase following MI in 53 pairs of such patients. The presence of mixed disulphides (MDS) was significantly higher in patients with family history than in controls; MDS were detected in 7 cases and only in 1 control. No difference was found in contrast in the distribution of fibrinogen, factor VII, factor VIII, vWF, protein C, protein S, AT III, HC II, PAI-1, lipoprotein (a). Nevertheless, independently from the family history, in the whole population of MI patients studied, 21 cases of suspected deficiency of protein C were found. Sixteen out of 53 patients with family history of MI and/or stroke had a family history of MI only. In patients with family history of MI the t-PA antigen levels were significantly lower than in the control group (7.5 +/- 4.4 vs 11.1 +/- 3.5 ng/ml, t = -2.6, p < 0.02). In the whole population of MI patients and in patients with a family history of thrombosis t-PA antigen was positively correlated with PAI-1 antigen and vWF. The correlation with PAI-1 was lost in patients with family history of MI.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Hemostatic factors and family history of thrombosis in patients with a myocardial infarct: a case-control study. The participants in GISSI-2-Efrim. Gruppo Italiano per lo Studio della Streptochinasi nell'Infarto Miocardico]. 764 26

The relevance of coagulation abnormalities in ischemic stroke remains uncertain. The purpose of this study was to identify abnormal patterns of coagulation in established ischemic stroke. We measured coagulation parameters in 86 patients with acute ischemic stroke: 10 lacunar, 55 atherothrombotic and 21 cardioembolic. Statistical comparisons were made between different stroke groups and between all stroke patients and 60 healthy controls. A decrease in functional antithrombin III and plasminogen and an increase in thrombin-antithrombin III complexes, total protein S, tissue plasminogen activator, plasminogen activator inhibitor and D-dimer were observed in the stroke group (p < 0.05). A positive correlation was found between tissue plasminogen activator and thrombin-antithrombin III levels in cardioembolic stroke (p < 0.05). Protein C levels showed significant differences between the three groups, and in the cardioembolic group they were lower than in controls (p < 0.05). Antiphospholipid antibodies were positive in two cases. We conclude that activation of coagulation and fibrinolytic pathways was observed during the acute phase of ischemic stroke. Protein C activity is different in the three types of strokes analyzed, and higher levels seem to be associated with lacunar lesions. Antiphospholipid antibodies do not seem to play an important role in the pathogenesis of stroke in a nonselected population.
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PMID:Hemostatic disturbances in acute ischemic stroke: a study of 86 patients. 765 7

Plasma concentrations of protein C, protein S and antithrombin III were measured in 33 unselected children with a history of cryptogenic stroke (group 1), four children with previously ascertained low plasma concentrations of protein C following stroke (group 2) and 42 healthy children undergoing minor surgery (group 3). Protein S and antithrombin III were normal in all patients. Low concentrations of protein C were found in two patients in group 1 and in six healthy children in group 3. Low protein C concentrations returned to normal over many months in three of the four patients in group 2. Prophylactic antithrombotic therapy and/or termination of pregnancy had been carried out unneccessarily in two families in whom inherited protein C deficiency was not confirmed. The suggestion that heterozygous protein C deficiency contributes to the risk of arterial stroke was not supported by this study.
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PMID:Protein C deficiency and stroke in early life. 767 69

Cerebral venous thrombosis is an uncommon complication of ulcerative colitis. We report the case of a 29-yr-old female with a recent diagnosis of ulcerative colitis who suffered stroke secondary to thrombosis of the veins of Galen and straight sinus. A search for a hypercoagulable state revealed a nonfamilial transient protein S deficiency. Possible involvement of C4b-binding protein in this hypercoagulable state is discussed.
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PMID:Transient protein S deficiency associated with cerebral venous thrombosis in active ulcerative colitis. 784 9

The carbohydrate deficient glycoprotein (CDG) syndrome is a newly described disorder characterized by impaired glycosylated molecules. It has been reported that transient stroke-like episodes appear in half of the patients. We performed hemostatic studies on three CDG syndrome patients belonging to two unrelated families. The most characteristic findings were decreases in antithrombin III (AT III), protein C and alpha 2 plasmin inhibitor to nearly half normal levels. Protein S was reduced in two (siblings) patients. Isoelectric focusing of AT III in native plasma revealed decreased intensity of the major band and increased intensity of a minor cathodal band. These minor AT III molecules were considered to lack an oligosaccharide sidechain. A 12-year-old girl defective not only for AT III but also protein C and protein S developed disseminated intravascular coagulation accompanied by arterial thrombosis in her left hand following dyspnea associated with bronchial asthma. These findings suggest that thrombotic predisposition in patients with CDG syndrome is due to decreased levels of major coagulation inhibitors, particularly as a result of impaired glycosylation of AT III.
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PMID:Hemostatic studies in patients with carbohydrate-deficient glycoprotein syndrome. 786 68

Cerebral infarction is a rare pathology among children and its etiology can be identified in almost two-thirds of cases. The remaining one-third are considered idiopathic. Recently, inherited disorders of blood coagulation predisposing to thrombosis have been taken into account as a possible cause of childhood stroke. We describe here a case of a 6-year-old child presenting with ischemic stroke and protein S (PS) defect. The family study suggested inheritance of the defect. The immunological characterization of PS in the affected family members was consistent with a defect mainly in the free form of PS. In the case here reported no associated predisposing condition to stroke could be identified but familial PS defect was found. No therapy was administered. Nevertheless symptoms disappeared spontaneously and there were no recurrences at the 1 year follow-up. Diagnostic imaging techniques demonstrated that a reduction in the cerebral ischemic area had occurred 2 months after the stroke.
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PMID:Childhood stroke associated with familial protein S deficiency. 794 12

We report six cases of protein S deficiency secondary to varicella. Five cases were complicated by thrombotic and vascular events, namely purpura fulminans and necrotic vasculitis, deep vein thrombosis and stroke. Two cases were associated with protein C deficiency and one case revealed a heterozygous factor XII deficiency. The underlying mechanism of this acquired protein S deficiency is unclear but could be related to a direct effect of zoster virus.
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PMID:Varicella and thrombotic complications associated with transient protein C and protein S deficiencies in children. 795 22


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