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)

In a 14-years old girl, suffering from deep venous thrombosis protein C deficiency (activity: 55-58%) was diagnosed. Following rethrombosis oral anticoagulant therapy (OAT) with Phenprocoumon (Marcumar) was started. To find the required dosage for OAT the concentrations of prothrombin fragment (F1+2; < 0.5 nM/l) and fibrin monomers (< 2.5 mg/l) were measured. With this procedure an unusually high thromboplastin time (40-45%) was found to be safe.
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PMID:[Prevention of thrombosis in protein C deficiency]. 833 42

Little is known about the pattern of Deep Vein Thrombosis in Saudi Arabia. Over 4 year period, 62 cases with strong evidence of venous thrombosis were studied in King Abdulaziz University and King Fahad Hospitals to learn the pattern of deep vein thrombosis in Jeddah, Western Saudi Arabia. There were 32 females and 30 males. The mean age of the group was 36.0 years (range 6-90 years). One or more risk factors was/were detected in 40 patients. Among these 14 factors, age more than 50 years, obesity, vasculitis, malignancy and postpartum were the common factors encountered. In other 22 patients, no risk factor was found. However, extensive laboratory search diagnosed 9 rare disorders out of these 22 cases. Antithrombin III, protein C, protein S deficiencies in 5, 2, 1 patients, consecutively. The last patient had significantly shortened PTT. The other 13 (21.0%) patients were considered real idiopathic DVT. Extremities were involved in 54 patients compared to only 8 cases with inferior vena cava or visceral thrombosis. The upper limb was affected in only 10 patients unlike the lower limb which was more commonly affected n = 37.
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PMID:Pattern of deep venous thrombosis in Jeddah area, western Saudi Arabia. 837 13

The alterations of the laboratory assays described for heparin monitoring in low molecular weight and unfractionated heparin prophylaxis groups did not correlate with the clinical outcome. Current laboratory techniques failed to detect an increased need for a higher dose of unfractionated or low molecular weight heparin to prevent DVT in these high-risk patients. The parameters commonly associated with thrombosis, that is, decreases in protein C and AT III were correlated with an increased incidence of DVT, but there was no difference in the assay values between the low molecular weight heparin and unfractionated heparin groups. Fibrinolysis activation is known to be associated with surgery; however, our data suggest an additional activation due to low molecular weight heparin compared with the unfractionated heparin group. Most interestingly, elevated PAI levels appear to correlate with thrombosis.
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PMID:Postoperative monitoring of low molecular weight heparin prophylaxis in high-risk patients. 839 35

A patient with recurrent deep vein thrombosis and heterozygous type II deficiency, characterized by reduced protein C activity in both amidolytic and clotting functional assays, was investigated by direct sequencing of PCR fragments derived from the coding portion of the protein C gene. AG (8856) to A transition was noted in the patient which was not present in healthy controls. This mutation is predicted to cause the substitution of Ser for Gly 381, an evolutionari'y conserved residue in the substrate binding pocket of serine-proteases (Gly 216, chymotrypsin numbering). A computer model of the structure of the serine-protease domain indicates that the properties of the altered protein C molecule can be explained on the basis of steric hindrance between the substituted serine and the substrate arginine side chains.
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PMID:Symptomatic type II protein C deficiency caused by a missense mutation (Gly 381-->Ser) in the substrate-binding pocket. 839 32

Heterozygosity for a G-->C mutation converting the highly conserved Gln184 (CAG) to His (CAC) was identified at the last nucleotide of exon 7 of the protein C gene in two family members with deep vein thrombosis. As the nucleotide is a part of the 5 splice site of intron G, it was examined how the mutation affected splicing of protein C pre-mRNA. Relevant protein C cDNA fragments were amplified with polymerase chain reaction after reverse transcription of ectopic mRNA from peripheral blood lymphocytes. Southern blot analysis and nucleotide sequencing of these fragments showed a fragment (A) corresponding to correctly spliced mRNA originating from the normal allele and a fragment (B) corresponding to a truncated mRNA lacking exon 7, originating from the mutant allele. A third fragment (C) lacking exons 7 and 8 was identified in both affected and unaffected family members, as well as in normal controls. Analysis of human liver protein C mRNA indicated that the ectopic lymphocyte mRNA was qualitatively representative for the tissue-specific mRNA. In conclusion, evidence is provided showing that the mutation abolishes formation of correctly spliced mRNA. This agrees with the observation that the mutation results in a type 1 protein C deficiency.
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PMID:Splice site mutation in the human protein C gene associated with venous thrombosis: demonstration of exon skipping by ectopic transcript analysis. 840 Feb 92

Progress in the management of medical disorders of pregnancy has occurred in many areas. Only salient features are reviewed. The pathophysiology of maternal hyperglycemia in diabetes and its effects on the fetus are explored. Antiphospholipid antibodies, implicated in adverse pregnancy sequelae, come under closer scrutiny in terms of management and correlation with outcome. Studies defining a need for a strict diet for optimal neonatal outcome are presented regarding maternal phenylketonuria. Coagulopathies including protein C deficiency and deep venous thrombosis are reviewed for their impact on pregnancy. Uncommon disorders including cerebrovascular accidents, ureteric obstruction, and myocardial infarction are discussed in relation to management and outcome in pregnancy.
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PMID:Maternal disease and injury in pregnancy. 842 32

Theoretic and in vitro evidence suggests that thrombosis and inflammation are interrelated. The purpose of the present study was to define the relationship between inflammation and deep venous thrombosis (DVT) in an in vivo model. Initiation of DVT was accomplished by administration of antibody to protein C (HPC4, 2 mg/kg) and tumor necrosis factor (TNF, 150 micrograms/kg); stasis; and subtle venous catheter injury. Thrombosis was assessed by thrombin-antithrombin assay (TAT), 125I-fibrinogen scanning (scan) over both the proximal and distal iliac veins, and ascending venography. Cytokines TNF, interleukin-6 (IL-6), monocyte chemotactic protein-1 (MCP-1), and interleukin-8 (IL-8) were measured along with differential white blood cell counts, platelet counts, fibrinogen (FIB), and erythrocyte sedimentation rates (ESR). Baboon pairs were sacrificed on day 3 (T + 3d), T + 6d, and T + 9d and veins removed. All animals developed inferior vena cava and left iliofemoral DVT by venography; no right DVT was found. TAT was elevated by T + 1hr and peaked at T + 3hrs. Left iliofemoral DVT was found at T + 1hr by scan and reached a 20% uptake difference between the affected left and nonaffected right side at T + 3hrs. TNF peaked at T + 1hr; MCP-1 peaked at T + 6hrs; IL-8 and IL-6 peaked on T + 2d; all cytokines declined to baseline. TNF and TAT elevations were found to correlate with all cytokines; elevations in IL-8 were correlated with elevations in MCP-1 and IL-6 (p < 0.05).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Inflammatory and procoagulant mediator interactions in an experimental baboon model of venous thrombosis. 845 29

Although patients with thromboembolic disease frequently have family histories of thrombosis, well-defined defects such as inherited deficiencies of anticoagulant proteins are found only in minority of cases. Herein, we present a family study of 42 years old woman with recurrent deep vein thrombosis which occurred first time four years ago during pregnancy, in subclavian vein, in relation to cardiac stimulator implantation because of atrio-ventricular III(0) block. Her laboratory investigation demonstrated normal APTT time, prothrombin time, platelet number, antithrombin III and protein C activity. Plasma antiphospholipid antibodies contents was within the normal range. The result of activated protein C(APC) resistance test was abnormal (R=1.64). Family study revealed similar degree of APC-resistance defect in her DVT symptomatic mother and two healthy young daughters (R=1.73 and 1.54 respectively). Additionally, a slightly reduced total protein S plasma concentration was found in the patient and her two children. The influence of a slightly reduced protein S level on the results of APC-resistance was excluded by evaluation of normalized activated protein C sensitivity ratio (nAPC-SR) as described de Ronde and Bertina.
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PMID:[Thrombophilia in a family with resistance to activated protein C and protein S deficiency]. 861 15

A 32-year-old woman was hospitalized with recurrent left-sided chest pain and dyspnea on exertion, which had progressed for approximately 10 years. Since age 18 she had been spending more than twelve hours per day in a predominantly seated position on a floor mat, engaged in Japanese dressmaking. A chest roentgenogram showed marked dilation of the main pulmonary arteries, bilateral oligemia in the upper lung fields and a peripheral infiltration in the middle field of the left lung. The (99m)Tc-MAA perfusion lung scan showed multiple defects in both lungs, but no abnormal findings were detected on a 133Xe ventilation scan. A pulmonary angiogram showed multiple occlusions of pulmonary arteries in both lungs. Because recurrent chest pain and dyspnea had been present for a long time, and because ultrasonic cardiography revealed pulmonary hypertension repeatedly for several years, pulmonary thromboembolism was considered to be chronic and recurrent. The patient had none of the following risk factors for pulmonary emboli: malignancy, neurological disease, heart disease, obesity, pregnancy, or a congenital coagulative abnormality such as deficiency of AT-III, protein C, protein S, or plasminogen. Because no other cause could be found, the chronic recurrent pulmonary thromboembolism most likely resulted from extensive sedentary work that caused stagnation of venous return and deep vein thrombosis.
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PMID:[Chronic recurrent pulmonary thromboembolism associated with sedentary work]. 862 76

It is estimated that 5% of patients with deep vein thrombosis and 50% of those with recurrent thrombosis have an inherited abnormality of coagulation, most commonly deficiency of protein C, protein S or antithrombin III. These disorders should be suspected when venous thrombosis occurs in a young person, if there is a family history of thrombosis, if thrombosis occurs at an unusual site or if there is recurrent thrombosis with no predisposing factors. Affected patients are treated with lifelong anticoagulation therapy. Thromboembolism and its sequelae often produce abnormal findings on radiologic examinations, and therefore the radiologist who is familiar with these abnormalities is in a position to be the first to suggest the diagnosis.
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PMID:Hereditary deficiency of protein C, protein S and antithrombin III. 869 90


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