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Query: UMLS:C0149871 (
deep vein thrombosis
)
12,364
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Most people who experience venous thrombosis have normal hemostasis. Some people have inherited deficiencies of protein C,
protein S
, and antithrombin iii. They tend to have
deep venous thrombosis
which increases their risk for pulmonary emboli. Some acquired disorders which predisposes people to thrombosis include defective fibrinolysis which often occurs after surgery or infection, Trousseau's syndrome (excessive coagulant activity linked with adenocarcinoma), and lupus anticoagulant which is an immunoglobulin G or M antibody directed against negatively charged phospholipids. Hormones and probably not a dilution effect reduces free and bound
protein S
levels during pregnancy. Functional
protein S
activity is still 40-50% below normal levels 1-3 days after delivery. This decrease appears to protect against bleeding but does have venous thrombosis and pulmonary emboli during pregnancy as side effects. Non-oral-contraceptive (OC) users have greatly higher
protein S
levels than do OC users (28.6 mcg/ml vs. 24.3 mcg/ml; p.005) which gives more credence to the belief that hormones are responsible for the fall in
protein S
activity during pregnancy. OCs reduce free and total
protein S
levels almost 20%. Smoking may even further reduce these levels in women during pregnancy and who use Ocs. Women who have had venous thrombosis should not use OCs. Physicians should also consider family history especially age of affected family member, severity of thrombotic episodes, and the clinical setting. They should look for an underlying abnormality in patients who develop thrombosis while using OCs. If thrombosis develops during pregnancy, physicians should call for a venogram, venous duplex scanning, and, if required, invasive tests. The most sensible treatment is intravenous heparin for 5-7 days then therapeutic doses of heparin. Heparin therapy should stop before delivery and be reinstituted shortly thereafter and continued throughout the postpartum period. Physicians should take extra precautions when performing surgery on an OC user.
...
PMID:Recent advances in understanding clotting and evaluating patients with recurrent thrombosis. 141 44
A 42-year-old Italian woman presenting with spontaneous
deep vein thrombosis
of the right arm, was found to have inherited a deficiency of both
protein S
(PS) and heparin co-factor II (HC II). The two defects seemed to segregate independently, since her son exhibited only a HC II deficiency while one of her sisters manifested only the PS defect. All affected patients appeared heterozygous for one or other or both deficiency states. The proposita and her sister exhibited a congenital PS deficiency consisting of normal or near normal levels of total PS antigen and C4b-binding protein (C4b-BP) but a moderate reduction both of free PS antigen and of PS functional activity. In addition, the proposita and her son had half normal levels of HC II antigen and activity. Except for the proposita, all were asymptomatic. Inherited deficiencies either of PS or of HC II have been associated with thrombotic manifestations. Since the proposita had an inherited combined defect of the two proteins, severe thrombotic events might be expected. However, this was not found to be the case. The role of HC II deficiency in the pathogenesis of thrombosis whether alone or combined remains to be fully investigated.
...
PMID:Combined inherited protein S and heparin co-factor II deficiency in a patient with upper limb thrombosis: a family study. 144 May 13
Of 67 patients with acute
deep vein thrombosis
of the lower extremity (DVT), 43 patients were treated by venous thrombectomy and 24 patients were managed by conservative treatment. The clinical effect of thrombectomy was evaluated by analyzing follow-up results in the 2 groups. The cumulative incidences of pigmentation and stasis ulcer at the 5th year were 2.7% and 0% respectively in the thrombectomy group, and 24.3% and 10% respectively in the conservative treatment group. Pigmentation and stasis ulcer were significantly more frequent in the conservative treatment group (p < 0.01). It is concluded that venous thrombectomy is superior to conservative treatment to prevent late postthrombotic sequelae. Protein C,
protein S
and plasminogen were assayed in 40 DVT patients to determine the incidence of hypercoagulable state in DVT. Congenital deficiency or abnormality were found in 15 patients (37.5%). In such DVT patients with thrombophilia anticoagulant prophylaxis should be continued to decrease a risk of rethrombosis.
...
PMID:[The treatment of choice in deep vein thrombosis of the lower extremity]. 147 Jan 17
Deep venous thrombosis
and pulmonary embolism are relatively frequent occurrences in pregnancy and the postpartum period. The diagnosis of
deep venous thrombosis
and pulmonary embolism requires accurate objective tests because clinical diagnosis is unreliable. Procedures that expose the fetus to ionizing radiation must sometimes be performed to make an accurate diagnosis; current evidence suggests that the adverse effects to the fetus associated with such procedures are minimal. Heparin is the anticoagulant of choice during pregnancy and is used for both the treatment and prevention of venous thrombosis and pulmonary embolism. Patients with deficiencies of antithrombin III, protein C, or
protein S
as well as patients with antiphospholipid antibodies are at increased risk for thrombotic complications and require particular vigilance during pregnancy.
...
PMID:Deep venous thrombosis and pulmonary embolism in pregnancy. 147 24
The overall incidence per year of
deep vein thrombosis
is about one per thousand, but may be much higher in the presence of certain clinical risk factors such as advanced age, immobilization, surgical procedures, pregnancy, puerperium, use of oral contraceptive agents and malignancy. Moreover, homocystinuria, nephrotic syndrome, systemic lupus erythematosus and hematological disorders such as paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria or myeloproliferative syndromes predispose to thrombotic disease. Evaluation of the patient with thromboembolism should include detailed history, clinical examination and laboratory investigation to exclude these secondary thrombophilic states. Primary or hereditary thrombophilia is suspected mainly in patients suffering from (venous) thromboembolism at an early age (< 45 years), especially if recurrent and/or familial thrombosis is present. Hereditary thrombophilia may be due to deficiency of antithrombin III, protein C,
protein S
or plasminogen, some other defects being less well-established prethrombotic risk factors. These currently recognized primary prethrombotic molecular defects are found in 10 to 30% of patients with idiopathic thromboembolism. In the majority of cases the cause of thrombosis remains unknown.
...
PMID:[Evaluating the origin of thrombophilia: indications and implementation]. 148 83
During a 3-year period we studied 393 adult patients (382 of whom were unrelated) with a history of acute venous thromboembolism. A congenital deficiency state known to predispose to thrombosis was found in 27.2%. Of these, most were due to deficiencies of protein C (9.2%),
protein S
(7.6%), antithrombin III (5%) or to increased plasma PAI-1 concentration (3.1%) which, in the absence of any known factor that predisposes towards thrombosis, results in a diminished fibrinolytic activity. There was a characteristic pattern between the age of onset (mean 34 years) of thrombosis and individual protein deficiency. Thrombosis appeared spontaneously in 73% of cases with recurrence in 80%. In contrast, in the remaining unrelated patients, 138 (35.1%) in whom venous thromboembolism was secondary and occurred at a mean age of 43 years, and in the other 140 (35.6%) who suffered thromboembolism spontaneously at a later age (mean age 55), there was no permanent protein deficiency state or alteration in fibrinolytic activity and thrombosis recurrence was lower (53.6% and 20.7% respectively). Of the 393 patients,
deep vein thrombosis
was the most common manifestation; however, in congenital thrombophilia, thrombosis of visceral vessels and Raynaud's syndrome (6%) were also detected.
...
PMID:Congenital thrombophilia among patients with venous thromboembolism. 148 96
A plasma free
protein S
deficiency was detected in 41 of 63 patients infected with the human immunodeficiency virus type I (HIV-1). This study consisted in a prospective analysis of blood samples from 26 patients with confirmed diagnosis of AIDS, two with AIDS-related complex, 10 with polyadenopathy, and 25 who were asymptomatic. Protein S levels were compared to a matched control group of 24 healthy subjects. A
deep venous thrombosis
occurred in three AIDS patients with free
protein S
deficiency. A significant decrease in plasma free
protein S
levels was observed in HIV-1-seropositive patients (mean +/- SD, 56.5 +/- 23.3%) as compared with control subjects (105.3 +/- 18%, p = 0.0001). Free
protein S
levels were significantly lower in patients with full-blown AIDS (37.6 +/- 12.3%) than in patients without AIDS (69.8 +/- 19.9%, p = 0.0001). Low plasma free
protein S
levels correlated with high beta 2-microglobulin values (p = 0.0001), low CD4+ T-cell counts (p = 0.0002) and elevated urinary neopterin concentrations (p = 0.005). According to a multiple regression analysis, the progression to stages IVB, IVC1 or IVD of the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) appeared to be the main explanatory variable in free
protein S
-deficient patients. Such results suggest that free
protein S
deficiency may coincide with the development of AIDS. This could contribute to hypercoagulability and, in some instances, thromboembolic complications in AIDS patients.
...
PMID:Acquired protein S deficiency: correlation with advanced disease in HIV-1-infected patients. 841 70
Hereditary deficiency of protein C,
protein S
or antithrombin III has been associated with an increased incidence of venous thrombosis or pulmonary embolism. The relationship between these deficiencies and the development of arterial thrombosis is a matter of current investigation. We retrospectively studied the occurrence of arterial thrombosis in 92 symptomatic patients belonging to a group of 160 with a confirmed diagnosis of hereditary deficiency of one of the physiologic clotting inhibitors. Seventeen of them experienced at least one arterial thrombotic event. This indicates that about one out of five of the symptomatic patients had experienced arterial thrombosis. The control group consisted of 92 sex and age matched (+/- 5 years) patients with no clotting deficiency who had experienced in the same period at least one episode of
deep vein thrombosis
or pulmonary embolism. Only one of them had developed arterial thrombosis. Ischemic stroke, myocardial infarction, upper and lower limb arterial thrombosis, and mesenteric artery occlusion occurred regardless of the type of defect taken into account; mean age of about 37.05 +/- 23 years (mean +/- SD). In some cases, arterial thrombosis was fatal. The overall number of venous thrombotic events in the 92 symptomatic patients of this study was much higher than that of arterial thrombosis, with a ratio of 24 to 1. The use of long-term anticoagulant therapy in our group of patients seemed to be able to prevent recurrences of both arterial and venous thrombosis.
...
PMID:Occurrence of arterial thrombosis in a cohort of patients with hereditary deficiency of clotting inhibitors. 153 14
Recently, the authors managed three patients with AIDS and venous thromboembolism. All three were active, ambulatory, and without known risk factors for pulmonary embolism or
deep venous thrombosis
. One patient had a low titer for IgG anticardiolipin antibody (1:13). Two had low normal values for free
protein S
, and the third patient had a very low value (5%). Clinicians caring for AIDS patients should be alert to the possibility that venous thromboembolism may complicate HIV infection.
...
PMID:Case report: venous thromboembolism in AIDS. 160 69
6 patients with
deep vein thrombosis
triggered by drug therapy, that is oral contraceptives in 5 and the anticonvulsant tranexamic acid in 1, are described. These cases were among 40 symptomatic patients out of a total group of 81 with congenital coagulation inhibitor defects studied over 10 years at the Institute of Medical Semiotics, Padua, Italy. The 5 women with
deep vein thrombosis
ranged in age from 20-34, and had typically taken oral contraceptives containing 35 mcg ethinyl estradiol in combined or phasic preparations, for 1 to 8 cycles. One women, however, had been prescribed sequential pills containing 50 mcg mestranol. Another had taken oral contraceptives with impunity for 3 years, but developed
deep vein thrombosis
after taking tranexamic acid for 10 days. All recovered after heparin or oral anticoagulant therapy, except a 21 year old whose condition evolved into complete ileo-caval obstruction up to the renal veins, and was treated with urokinase. the congenital defects involved were 3 probable heterozygous true deficiencies of antithrombin III (low ATIII antigen and activity); a decreased protein C antigen to factor X antigen ratio; a heparin cofactor II deficiency; and a type I
protein S
deficiency (low free
protein S
, with normal total
protein S
and normal levels of C4B-bp.) While 5 of these 6 women had family histories of thromboembolic disease, the drug was prescribed without knowing that they were heterozygous for a coagulation inhibitor deficiency. The incidence of drug-induced thromboembolism was low in this series overall, where most of the events were triggered by surgery or trauma.
...
PMID:The role of drugs, particularly oral contraceptives, in triggering thrombosis in congenital defects of coagulation inhibitors: a study of six patients. 178 39
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