Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0149871 (deep vein thrombosis)
12,364 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The use of heparin sodium and warfarin sodium in the treatment of pulmonary embolus (PE), deep vein thrombosis (DVT) and thrombophlebitis (TP) was studied by a hospital pharmacy department. During a four-month period, the charts of 26 patients were audited for anticoagulant dosages used; laboratory test monitoring of anticoagulant dosage used; laboratory test minitoring of anticoagulant therapy; complications of, contraindications to, and patient compliance with anticoagulant therapy. These variables were evaluated on the basis of compliance with a written anticoagulant protocol. Initial doses of heparin sodium and warfarin sodium were acceptable in 43% of patients. Maintenance dosing with heparin sodium was acceptable in 89% of patients. Activated partial thromboplastin times (APTT) were ordered correctly for 65% of patients. APTTs were within therapeutic ranges in 31% of patients. The duration of heparin-warfarin overlap was possibly to definitely acceptable in 71% of patients. Prothrombin times were properly monitored in 50% of patients. Complications of anticoagulant therapy were evident in only one patient. There were a number of potentially serious diversions from the protocol. The pharmacy department planned to issue bulletins designed to correct the problems.
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PMID:Audit of anticoagulant therapy of pulmonary embolus, deep vein thrombosis and thrombophlebitis. 42 Feb 10

Three groups of patients receiving oral anticoagulation treatment were evaluated. The groups consisted of patients with mechanical heart valve prosthesis (n = 60), patients after coronary bypass graft surgery (n = 60) and patients using oral anticoagulation after deep venous thrombosis or pulmonary embolism (n = 60). The patient groups were subdivided into three groups of 20 patients, each group receiving different levels of oral anticoagulation as indicated by the international normalized ratio (INR). Prothrombin fragment 1 + 2, thrombin-antithrombin III complexes and fibrin monomers were determined as coagulation activation makers. The prothrombin fragments 1 + 2 were INR dependent in all groups whereas the thrombin-antithrombin III values were only INR dependent in the group of patients with mechanical heart valve prosthesis. For fibrin monomers no correlation with the INR levels could be found. These results indicate that prothrombin fragment 1 + 2 is the only laboratory quantity of the three, which provides a suitable index of low thrombin activity during anticoagulation therapy.
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PMID:Comparison of markers of coagulation activation in patients under oral anticoagulation at different levels. 144 59

A prospective study was carried out to see whether a small fixed dose of warfarin (1 mg daily) given before operation (mean 20 days) would prevent deep vein thrombosis in patients having major gynaecological surgery. One hundred and four patients were randomised into three groups: fixed minidose warfarin; full dose oral anticoagulation; and no treatment (controls). There was a significantly lower incidence of deep vein thrombosis in the minidose warfarin and full dose anticoagulant treatment groups (9% (3/32) and 3% (1/35) respectively) than in the controls (30%; 11/37) but no significant difference between the two anticoagulant treatment groups. Prothrombin time and the activated partial thromboplastin time were normal on the day of surgery in the warfarin treatment group, whereas times were prolonged in the group given full dose anticoagulation. Mean haemoglobin concentrations fell in all three groups after operation but the fall was significantly less in the minidose warfarin treatment group than after full dose anticoagulation. The benefit from full dose oral anticoagulant prophylaxis, based on a preoperative international normalised ratio of 1.5-2.5 with rabbit brain Manchester reagent, was similar to the protection achieved in an oral anticoagulant treatment group controlled with human brain Manchester comparative reagent at a similar level of anticoagulation. The lack of disturbance of normal haemostasis at the time of operation together with a significant reduction in deep vein thrombosis may encourage surgeons to introduce minidose prophylaxis with warfarin.
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PMID:Fixed minidose warfarin: a new approach to prophylaxis against venous thrombosis after major surgery. 312 Sep 89

Prothrombin fragments (F1+2) can be used to monitor oral anticoagulation; their generation is also suppressed by heparin. We studied the course of F1+2, aPTT, heparin doses administered and heparin concentrations, as well as prothrombin time, during the first 7 days of heparin therapy (target aPTT 70 s) and overlapping oral anticoagulation (target INR 2-3) in 26 patients routinely treated for deep venous thrombosis (deep venous thrombosis +/- pulmonary embolism, 23 patients) or pulmonary embolism with a history of recurring deep venous thrombosis (3 patients). Although we found significant suppression of F1+2 between all pre- and post-treatment values, a transient, significant increase was seen on days 2-4. The amount of heparin given was stable from day 1-5; the fact of a transient increase in F1+2 might thus indicate that heparin doses routinely used are too low for the treatment of hypercoagulability in deep venous thrombosis in patients. We also found a decrease in heparin concentration on day 2, which may be explicable by changed pharmacokinetics of heparin in individuals with deep venous thrombosis. In conclusion, F1+2 may be useful for monitoring heparin treatment and oral anticoagulation in deep venous thrombosis patients from a laboratory point of view. However, larger studies are necessary to confirm these results. It remains to be clarified whether monitoring of anticoagulation by molecular markers might improve therapy of deep venous thrombosis. Such studies are in progress.
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PMID:[Is the assessment of prothrombin fragment F1+2 for monitoring of heparin therapy in patients with deep vein thrombosis useful?]. 789 70

Dermatan sulfate is an antithrombotic glycosaminoglycan which has been shown to be effective in preventing deep venous thrombosis in general surgery patients when present at concentrations less than 1 microgram/ml. It has also been found to circulate physiologically in similar concentrations in pregnant women at term and in cord blood. We investigated the ability of dermatan sulfate added to plasma at 0.2, 0.5 and 1.0 microgram/ml to inhibit thrombin generation initiated by low concentrations of recombinant human tissue factor in defibrinated plasma. A dose dependent decrease in thrombin potential was demonstrated at therapeutically relevant concentrations of dermatan sulfate (0.5 and 1.0 microgram/ml) but there was no induction of a lag phase in thrombin generation. We were unable to demonstrate a significant effect on thrombin potential of dermatan sulfate at a concentration similar to that found in pregnancy plasma (0.2 microgram/ml). This indicates that either the dermatan sulfate concentration found in pregnancy plasma is not physiologically relevant or that our experimental system (which lacks platelets and fibrin) does not accurately reflect physiologic conditions. The effect on the thrombin potential was somewhat greater at the lowest concentration of tissue factor and amounted to a maximum inhibition of approximately 50% at 1 microgram/ml dermatan sulfate. A dose dependent increase in formation of thrombin-heparin cofactor II complexes and a decrease in thrombin-antithrombin complex formation with increasing dermatan sulfate concentration were observed at all dermatan sulfate concentrations. Prothrombin consumption was not changed by any dose of dermatan sulfate. We conclude that dermatan sulfate, at the concentrations tested, catalyses inhibition of free thrombin by heparin cofactor II but not efficiently enough to inhibit prothrombinase formation.
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PMID:The effects of dermatan sulfate at submicrogram/ml concentrations on in vitro thrombin generation. 872 17

This study was carried out in order to compare the coagulation balance in patients with colorectal cancer before and after surgical removal of tumor with an age matched non-malignancy control group. Furthermore, it was studied whether preoperative coagulation state in cancer patients was correlated to the postoperative development of deep venous thrombosis (DVT) diagnosed by venography. Plasma was collected preoperatively in 93 cancer patients and 30 controls, and postoperatively on day one, two, seven, and ninety in 88 cancer patients and 18 controls. Prothrombin fragment 1 + 2 (F1 + 2), thrombin-antithrombin complex (TAT), and total fibrin(ogen) degradation products (TDP) were quantitated in plasma by enzyme linked immunosorbent assays (ELISA). As compared to controls, patients admitted for cancer treatment displayed significantly higher levels of F1 + 2 and TAT. Patients suffering from advanced colorectal cancer had significantly higher levels of TAT and TDP as compared to patients with localized colorectal cancer. Twenty-three percent of cancer patients developed DVT postoperatively. Preoperatively these patients displayed significantly higher TDP levels, and postoperatively higher levels of F1 + 2, TAT, and TDP compared to cancer patients without DVT. The marked activation of blood coagulation and fibrinolysis observed in all patients following major abdominal surgery was even more pronounced in patients not cured for cancer.
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PMID:Pre- and postoperative state of coagulation and fibrinolysis in plasma of patients with benign and malignant colorectal disease--a preliminary study. 890 90

The goal of this article is to study the association of known markers of thrombophilia with venous thrombosis in young patients (< 45 years) from the Western part of India. A prospective study of 432 patients (252 males and 180 females, age 1-45 years) was conducted between 1994 and 2000 (6 years). The diagnosis was confirmed in all the patients by ultrasound with Doppler or by a computed tomograph (CT) scan of the brain with or without contrast depending on the case. Detailed clinical examination, and family history was taken to establish recurrent thrombosis and familial occurrence of thrombosis. The markers studied were protein C, protein S, antithrombin (AT) III, factor V Leiden mutation, prothrombin gene G20210A polymorphism, and the thermolabile MTHFR variant C677T polymorphism, using appropriate techniques. Lupus inhibitor was tested in the first 72 patients using Dilute Russel Viper Venom Time (DRVVT) test, and anticardiolipin antibodies were tested by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. Protein C, protein S, and AT III deficiency was detected in 9.5%, 6.5%, and 2.6%, respectively, among the patients. Anticardiolipin antibody was present in 9.9% of the patients, whereas lupus anticoagulant was present in 8.3% of patients; factor V Leiden mutation was detected in 3% of patients; thermolabile variant of MTHFR C677T polymorphism was present in 14.9% of patients with 1.2% homozygotes. Prothrombin G20210A polymorphism was not detected in any sample in this population. One hundred and four patients of 432 (24.9%) had recurrent attacks of thrombosis without any proximate precipitating cause, whereas 7.5 % of the patients had another close member of the family with a history of deep venous thrombosis. Eighty-six members from 28 families (out of 32 families giving family history of thrombosis) were investigated and found to have protein C and protein S deficiency in seven each; factor V Leiden was present in 6, and MTHFR C677T polymorphism was present in 5 cases. Hence, 25 of 86 members (28%) from the family of patients with familial history deep venous thrombosis had positive markers for thrombophilia. Thus, we could show that in young patients presenting with thrombosis, at least 34% of them had a demonstrable cause for thrombophilia. Prothrombin gene polymorphism G20210A seems to be nonexistent in our population and AT III deficiency also appears to be low compared to other markers of thrombophilia. There is a high prevalence of variant MTHFR C677T in our series, but the incidence of MTHFR C677T in our general population is also high. Hence, the significance of this finding in our cases of deep venous thrombosis remains to be seen, but we did not see any homozygotes when we tested 70 randomly selected asymptomatic persons, whereas in the present series, 1.8% of the patients had homozygosity for the MTHFR C677T polymorphism.
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PMID:Venous thromboembolism in young patients from western India: a study. 1129 95

In a prospective study, coagulation test results were compared in 137 patients with colorectal cancer (CRC) and 39 subjects with benign colorectal diseases. Prothrombin fragment 1+2 (F1+2), thrombin-antithrombin complex (TAT), and soluble fibrin (SF) were measured in plasma before and after surgery. CRC patients presented with significantly higher values of F1+2 and TAT than controls. Patients with localised CRC had elevated values of F1+2 and TAT, whereas patients with advanced CRC also had elevated SF values. TAT and SF levels correlated with tumour spread, and normal values virtually excluded advanced cancer. Postoperative deep venous thrombosis (DVT) was diagnosed by phlebography in 20% of the CRC patients. Preoperative values of the markers did not predict postoperative DVT, but postoperative values did.
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PMID:Relationship of coagulation test abnormalities to tumour burden and postoperative DVT in resected colorectal cancer. 1191 70

Prothrombin fragments (F1+2), thrombin-antithrombin complexes (TAT) and D-dimers, markers of hemostatic system activation, were measured in 59 consecutive patients with deep vein thrombosis (DVT). Patients were randomly treated either with subcutaneous unfractionated heparin (UH) administered in two to three subcutaneous doses adjusted to activated partial thromboplastin time (APTT) or with low-molecular weight heparin (LMWH) (dalteparin) administered in a fixed dose of 200 IU/kg body weight in one subcutaneous injection daily. Before treatment, F1+2, TAT and D-dimer were above the cut-off level in 27/59 (46%), 34/59 (58%) and all (100%) patients, respectively. Significant associations were observed between F1+2 and TAT (r=.66, P<.001), TAT and D-dimer (r=.36, P<.005) and F1+2 and D-dimer (r=.30, P<.050). On the third day of treatment, F1+2 and TAT significantly decreased to reference values in almost all patients (in 64/66 determinations of both F1+2 and TAT) and remained low on the seventh day of treatment. Compared to pretreatment values, a nonsignificant decrease of D-dimer was noted in both groups, but all values remained above the cut-off value. When markers of hemostatic system activation in the UH and LMWH groups were compared, no significant differences were observed. It was concluded that subcutaneous UH in an APTT-adjusted dose and subcutaneous LMWH in a once-daily weight-adjusted dose controlled these markers of hemostatic system activation in a similar manner.
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PMID:Markers of hemostatic system activation during treatment of deep vein thrombosis with subcutaneous unfractionated or low-molecular weight heparin. 1192 30

Paediatric patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) and antiphospholipid antibodies (aPL), specifically lupus anticoagulants (LAC) are at high risk of developing thromboembolic events (TE). Our objectives were to determine the prevalence of TE in paediatric SLE patients with LAC and to determine if anticoagulation was effective to decrease morbidity, and prevent recurrent TE. We reviewed data on 149 paediatric SLE patients treated over 10 years. In all, 24 patients (16%) were LAC positive, and 21 TE occurred in 13 of these LAC positive patients (54% incidence of TE in LAC positive patients). The events were cerebral venous thrombosis (9), arterial stroke (3), deep venous thrombosis (4), pulmonary embolism (2), other venous event (1) and other arterial events (2). The median duration between SLE diagnosis and first TE was 15.2 months (range 0-62), and the median age at first TE was 15.1 years (range 11.4-18.4). Long-term anticoagulation was prescribed, and eight patients (62%) were transferred to adult care on lifelong oral warfarin; four (31%) remain under our care on lifelong warfarin, and one patient died of causes unrelated to her TE. No patient has been identified with deficiencies of protein C, protein S or antithrombin III. One patient is heterozygous for Factor V Leiden, and one is heterozygous for both the Prothrombin 20210A mutation and the MTHFR (methylene tetrahydrofolate reductase) mutation. Four patients had recurrent TE (31%), and three were not anticoagulated at the time of their second event. One patient had two recurrences on therapeutic anticoagulation. Thromboembolic events are prevalent in the LAC positive paediatric SLE population, and consideration for lifelong anticoagulation must occur after an initial TE.
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PMID:Thromboembolism in paediatric lupus patients. 1459 22


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