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Query: UMLS:C0038454 (
stroke
)
147,016
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We report three kindreds in whom
plasminogen
deficiency was associated with thrombosis and in whom the ratio of functional and immunological values of
plasminogen
was consistent with type I deficiency. An additional subject with
plasminogen
deficiency is also described. The three propositi presented with venous thrombotic disease. The fourth subject presented with a thrombotic
stroke
. Investigation of family members in three of these four cases revealed other subjects who were found to have low levels of
plasminogen
and who were asymptomatic. The pattern of inheritance appears to be autosomal dominant. In one woman,
plasminogen
levels were shown to rise to within the normal range during pregnancy and returned to low levels after delivery. A total of eight pregnancies were reviewed in our series and no thrombotic events occurred.
...
PMID:Thrombovascular disease and familial plasminogen deficiency: a report of three kindreds. 321 92
The efficacy of a single intravenous bolus of anisoylated
plasminogen
streptokinase activator complex (APSAC 30U in 4 to 5 minutes) versus an intravenous infusion of streptokinase (1.5 X 10(6) U in 60 minutes) was assessed in 86 patients with evolving myocardial infarction of less than 6 hours duration in a cooperative randomised study. The patency of the infarct-related artery was assessed by coronary angiography at, on average, 90 minutes after therapy (mean time: APSAC 95 minutes, streptokinase 105 minutes). The treatment groups were similar with respect to sex, age, location of myocardial infarction and the delay from onset of pain to treatment. The 90-minute patency rate (grade 2 to 3) was 71.8% in the APSAC group and 55.8% in the streptokinase group; the difference was not statistically significant. There was no difference between the drop in fibrinogen concentrations in the 2 groups at 3 or 24 hours. The minimal concentration obtained at the first assessment was +/- 0.2 g/L in the streptokinase group and 0.5 g/L in the APSAC group. One patient in the APSAC group, who had a previous meningeal bleeding, had a non-fatal
cerebrovascular accident
. In a subgroup of 38 patients who had 3 control coronary angiograms at 90 minutes, 24 hours and 3 weeks, the patency rate was 63, 82 and 93%, respectively, in the APSAC group and 48, 88 and 92%, respectively, in the streptokinase group (the difference was not statistically significant). None of the patients in the APSAC group presented with reocclusion, whilst 3 patients in the streptokinase group had reocclusions.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Intravenous anisoylated plasminogen streptokinase activator complex versus intravenous streptokinase in evolving myocardial infarction. Preliminary data from a randomised multicentre study. 331 81
Human arteries and veins contract with hypoxia and deprivation of substrate provoked by increasing calcium inflow into the cell and reduced energy. Such spasm may be eliminated by phosphoenolpyruvate which loads up the cell's energy, blocking glycogen reduction at the same time. Reperfusion will then guarantee a sufficient energy
stroke
. Therapy should pursue the following steps: 1. Phosphoenolpyruvate infusion (1 X 10(-6) up to 1 X 10(-3) gm/ml in tyrodes solution pH 7.3) into the arterial branch, proximal and distal to the injury. 2. Subsequent treatment with vasodilating drugs and rheologically active substances. 3. Failed therapy after more than three hours warm ischemia could be due to autolytic processes and requires resection of the affected vessel. 4. The imbalance of the thrombolytic system with the so-called no reflow phenomenon could be due to a plasminogen activator's inhibitor released during hypoxia. Such cases may reasonably be treated by urokinase or by streptokinase
plasminogen
complex.
...
PMID:[Vascular spasms in microsurgery]. 362 68
Fifty-seven elderly patients (35 males, 22 females; age range 65-80 years, mean 70 years) with acute myocardial infarction received thrombolytic therapy within 8 h using either streptokinase or anisoylated
plasminogen
streptokinase activator complex. Coronary artery reperfusion was confirmed by early coronary arteriography. The overall reperfusion rate was 77%. Accurate non-invasive markers of reperfusion included: a rapid fall in the S-T segment elevation, an early peak of the creatinine phosphokinase enzyme curve and reperfusion arrhythmias. Clinical events suggesting early reocclusion occurred in 30%. Coronary arteriography was accompanied by local bleeding associated with the arterial puncture site in 2 patients and a
cerebrovascular accident
in 1 patient. Minor bleeding occurred in 6 other patients. In those where reperfusion occurred, the mortality at 1 month was 6.6% and in those who did not reperfuse or had early reocclusion 38%. At 1 year the figures were 10 and 46%, respectively.
...
PMID:Thrombolytic therapy in acute myocardial infarction in the elderly. 367 47
Coagulation parameters were initially monitored in 8 patients receiving whole body hyperthermia (WBH). Patients were heated by the warm water blanket technique to 41.8 degrees C (Tmax), maintained at this temperature for 2 hours, then allowed to cool. A fall in platelets was apparent by the time Tmax was achieved and continued during the 18 hours after WBH. Levels of beta-thromboglobulin (BTG) and platelet factor 4 rose by 56% and 191% by the end of treatment but returned to baseline 18 hours later. Fibrinogen,
plasminogen
and alpha 2-antiplasmin levels declined and FDP and fibrinopeptide A (FPA) levels increased during WBH. Factor XII and Factor VIII:C fell moderately during WBH while Factors VIII R:Ag, VIII:RC and V did not change or showed a late rise. Factor VII levels fell in 7 of 8 patients, reaching levels of 30% of normal in four. To better define the sequence of these coagulations perturbations, earlier and more frequent timepoints were studied in an additional 3 patients. This revealed that decreases in fibrinogen and
plasminogen
and increases in FPA and BTG occur very early (by the time the patient reaches 39 degrees C). On the other hand, a decrease in Factor VII activity was not apparent until patients had reached Tmax. WBH is therefore associated with a consumption coagulopathy. Possible mechanisms are discussed and extrapolations to the situation seen in heat
stroke
are suggested.
...
PMID:Activation of coagulation during therapeutic whole body hyperthermia. 373 68
A case of an 18-year-old woman with acute lymphoblastic leukemia who developed L-asparaginase-associated
stroke
and subclavian vein thrombosis is presented. The latter was also associated with a Hickman central venous catheter. Thrombotic complications occurred when plasma levels of
plasminogen
and antithrombin III were still markedly reduced as a result of L-asparaginase therapy, although the fibrinogen had recovered from its lower levels. The
stroke
was treated with fresh frozen plasma and the subclavian vein thrombosis was treated with streptokinase and fresh frozen plasma. L-asparaginase and Hickman-associated coagulopathy is reviewed and the treatment is discussed.
...
PMID:Thromboembolic complications associated with L-asparaginase therapy. Etiologic role of low antithrombin III and plasminogen levels and therapeutic correction by fresh frozen plasma. 385 65
21 patients (aged 28-81 years) with recent subarachnoid hemorrhage (10 saccular aneurysms, 3 arteriovenous angiomas, 8 normal angiograms) were continuously infused with tranexamic acid at a dosage of 5 g daily for up to 14 days. Therapy was surveyed by daily measurement of the available
plasminogen
activity (aPl) with the chromogenic substrate S-2251 and by a modified bioassay, whereby the concentration of tranexamic acid was determined thrombelastographically and expressed as antifibrinolytic equivalent. In addition, a battery of blood coagulation tests was performed daily. 5 patients died, 1 after postoperative
stroke
, 3 as a result of general complications during intensive care treatment, but only 1 due to rebleeding. 4 patients were successfully operated during the first week, 1 patient after 2 weeks. aPl fell from 99.2% (SEM 3.0%, n = 21) before treatment to 72.9% (SEM 3.5%, n = 21) after 24 h and to the therapeutic level between 50 and 60% from day 2 on. The mean steady state of the antifibrinolytic equivalent corresponded to about 150 micrograms/ml of tranexamic acid during infusion. Intra- and interindividual changes were relatively small for aPl, when compared with the antifibrinolytic equivalent measured by the bioassay. In 2 elderly patients tranexamic acid infusion had to be terminated because of clinical and laboratory signs of disseminated intravascular coagulation, whereby aPl fell below the therapeutic range, elucidating that this method is a sensitive indicator for a hypercoagulable state and useful for the surveillance of therapy with antifibrinoltic agents.
...
PMID:Monitoring of antifibrinolytic treatment in subarachnoid hemorrhage. 399 57
In a randomized, single-blind study, 30 patients with acute ischemic
stroke
were treated with either low-molecular weight dextran and mannitol alone (group A, mean age, 63.3 +/- 11.8 years, n = 15) or in combination with the viper venom enzyme ancrod (group B, mean age, 67.9 +/- 7.6 years, n = 15). Lowering of plasma fibrinogen levels to 100-130 mg/dL with ancrod resulted in a significant reduction of the apparent blood viscosity, ie, of 37% at a shear rate of 0.03 s-1, compared with only 7% in group A. Fibrin degradation products increased considerably from 3.1 +/- 0.4 to 154.3 +/- 31.6 mg/L on day 3, while
plasminogen
decreased from 98.2% +/- 2.0% to 79.8% +/- 2.9% in group B. Global coagulation and platelet function tests were not influenced by either treatment. Neurological score improved by 1.1 arbitrary units (AU) in group A and by 2.6 AU in group B. Five patients in group A and two in group B died during the first two weeks. This preliminary study indicated a slightly better outcome in the ancrod treated patients. The beneficial effect may be due to the anticoagulative and fibrinolytic activity of ancrod rather than its effect on blood viscosity.
...
PMID:Controlled trial of ancrod in ischemic stroke. 619 6
A sample of in all 119 patients with ischemic cerebrovascular disease (TIA and minor
stroke
) below the age of 55 years, were submitted for testing of fibrinolysis in the late recovery phase after acute disease. Defective fibrinolysis, as tested after venous stasis, was found in patients (p less than 0.01) as compared to controls using a conventional fibrin plate method. A new chromogenic peptide substrate method showed a similar tendency. Antiactivator activity, measured as antiurokinase, using a peptide substrate, was significantly higher (p less than 0.01) in young female patients than in female controls. Alpha 2-antiplasmin (peptide substrate method) was significantly (p less than 0.001) higher in female than male patients. However, no correlation was found between inhibitors of fibrinolysis and defective fibrinolysis after venous occlusion. Furthermore, in a pilot study of vein biopsies, normal content of vascular
plasminogen
activators was found in the majority of cases. Thus, it is suggested that defective fibrinolysis in most cases reflects a disturbed release function.
...
PMID:A study of hemostasis in ischemic cerebrovascular disease. III. Abnormalities in vascular plasminogen activators, antiactivators and alpha 2-antiplasmin. 681 Apr 98
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.
...
PMID:Disseminated intravascular coagulation: antithrombin, plasminogen, and coagulation abnormalities in 41 dogs. 726 67
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