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Query: UMLS:C0149871 (
deep vein thrombosis
)
12,364
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Nephrotic syndrome is a hypercoagulable state with variable prevalence of clinical thrombosis. The role of platelet aggregation, fibrinogen and antithrombin III and
protein S
levels in the pathogenesis of hypercoagulable state in these patients is controversial. Since no study on Indians is available, the clinical and laboratory profile of 22 patients of nephrotic syndrome (age 18-35 years with an MF ratio of 4:3), have been studied. The coagulation profile revealed a prolonged APTT in 12 patients (54.5%), and a prolonged TT in four (18.1%). In the rest APTT and TT were normal. PT was raised in two patients. Fibrinogen, an acute phase reactant was raised in five patients (22.7%). Antithrombin III levels were reduced in 19 patients (86.4%), normal in one and raised in two patients. Free Protein S levels were high in 12(54.5%), normal in seven and decreased in three patients. Platelet aggregation with adrenaline and adenosine diphosphate was raised in 6 patients. Ultrasonographically detected
deep vein thrombosis
was seen in one patient only (4.5%) who had ATIII levels of 48%. This low incidence can be explained by elevated
protein S
levels which was found to be raised in 12(54.5%) cases,
protein S
being an anticoagulant factor. This low level of clinical thrombosis in Indian patients of nephrotic syndrome may be an ethnic variable factor. It is thus concluded that although patients with nephrotic syndrome have a hypercoagulable state, clinical thrombosis is rarely seen in Indian patients with nephrotic syndrome.
...
PMID:Prothrombotic factors in nephrotic syndrome. 1121 79
To assess the relationship between venous thrombosis and plasma glucosylceramide (GlcCer) or phosphatidylethanolamine (PE), plasma levels of GlcCer and PE were determined for 70 venous thrombosis patients referred for evaluation and 70 healthy blood donors. The mean GlcCer level, but not the PE level, was lower in patients versus controls (4.9 vs 6.5 microg/mL [P =.0007] and 66 vs 71 microg/mL [P =.48], respectively). As a measure of relative risk, the odds ratio for
deep vein thrombosis
in subjects with GlcCer levels below the 10th percentile of controls was 5.7 (95% CI, 2.3-14). To assess the influence of glycolipids on anticoagulant response to activated protein C (APC):
protein S
in modified prothrombin time assays, the effects of depleting endogenous plasma GlcCer by glucocerebrosidase treatment or of adding exogenous purified GlcCer or other neutral glycolipids to plasma were tested. Glucocerebrosidase treatment reduced plasma sensitivity to APC:
protein S
in parallel with GlcCer reduction. Exogenously added GlcCer and the homologous Glc-containing globotriaosylceramide (Gb3Cer), but not galactosylceramide, dose-dependently prolonged clotting times of normal plasma in the presence, but not absence, of APC:
protein S
, which suggests that GlcCer or Gb3Cer can enhance protein C pathway anticoagulant activity. In studies using purified proteins, inactivation of factor Va by APC:
protein S
was enhanced by GlcCer alone and by GlcCer in multicomponent vesicles containing phosphatidylserine and phosphatidylcholine. These results suggest that the neutral glycolipids GlcCer and Gb3Cer may directly contribute to the anticoagulant activity of the protein C pathway and that deficiency of plasma GlcCer may be a risk factor for venous thrombosis. (Blood. 2001;97:1907-1914)
...
PMID:Plasma glucosylceramide deficiency as potential risk factor for venous thrombosis and modulator of anticoagulant protein C pathway. 1126 46
Deep venous thrombosis
of the upper extremity (DVTUE) is a rare thrombotic disorder that may occur spontaneously but is most often related to predisposing factors, such as an indwelling central venous catheter, malignancy, or exercise. The role of coagulation disorders, i.e., a hypercoagulable state in the pathogenesis of DVTUE is not well known. We have evaluated both genetic and acquired thrombophilia parameters in consecutive patients with DVTUE. A hypercoagulable state was found in 32% of the patients. The most frequent coagulation abnormality was the presence of lupus anticoagulant or anticardiolipin antibodies (27%). Factor V Leiden mutation was detected in two patients, antithrombin deficiency in one, and none of the patients had the prothrombin G20210A gene variant or protein C or S deficiency. The prevalence of coagulation abnormalities was not significantly different in a subgroup of patients with spontaneous DVTUE as compared to those with an obvious predisposing factor, such as an indwelling central venous catheter. We conclude that antiphospholipid antibodies are frequently found in patients with DVTUE. Factor V Leiden mutation, prothrombin 20210A gene variant, protein C deficiency, and
protein S
deficiency do not seem to play a major pathogenetic role in DVTUE.
...
PMID:Hypercoagulability states in upper-extremity deep venous thrombosis. 1127 52
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.
...
PMID:Venous thromboembolism in young patients from western India: a study. 1129 95
One hundred and thirteen consecutive Japanese patients with
deep venous thrombosis
(
DVT
) were studied for the incidences of antithrombin III (AT-III), protein C (PC) and
protein S
(PS) deficiencies, and the results were compared with those of normal subjects. Ten of the 392 normal Japanese subjects were found with PS deficiency (n = 8, 2.02%) or PC deficiency (n = 2, 0.5%). PS deficiencies comprised type I (1/8, 12.5%), type 11 (4/8, 50%), and type III (3/8, 37.5%). All PC deficiencies were type I. Among patients with
DVT
, 32 (28.3%) were deficient in AT-III, PC and PS. These patients consisted of two AT-III deficiency (1.77%), nine PC deficiency (7.96%), 20 PS deficiency (17.7%), and one combined deficiency of PC and PS (0.88%). Both of the patients with AT-III deficiency were classified as type II, all those with PC deficiency as type I, and those with PS deficiency as type I in 25% (5/20), type II in 55% (11/20) and type III in 20% (4/20). The frequency of PC and PS deficiencies in patients with
DVT
were 15.6 and 7.38 times the control population frequency, respectively, and this difference was statistically significant (P < 0.05). These data suggest that the Japanese population has a high frequency of PC and PS deficiencies. We recommend that PS activity should be measured for screening of thrombosis since type II deficiency accounted for approximately 50% of PS deficiency cases in both patients and the normal group in the Japanese.
...
PMID:Frequency of natural coagulation inhibitor (antithrombin III, protein C and protein S) deficiencies in Japanese patients with spontaneous deep vein thrombosis. 1130 83
The G20210A mutation in the prothrombin gene is associated with an increased risk of a first venous thromboembolic episode; few data are available about the long-term risk for recurrent venous thromboembolism and it is not known whether or not carriers of the mutation should be recommended lifelong anticoagulant treatment after the first thrombosis. We investigated 624 patients, referred for previous objectively documented
deep venous thrombosis
of the legs or pulmonary embolism, to determine the risk of recurrent thromboembolism in heterozygous carriers of the G20210A mutation in the prothrombin gene after the first episode of venous thromboembolism. After exclusion of other inherited (anti-thrombin, protein C,
protein S
deficiency and factor V Leiden) or acquired (anti-phospholipid antibody syndrome) causes of thrombophilia, 52 heterozygous carriers of the prothrombin mutation were compared with 283 patients with normal genotype. The relative risk for recurrent venous thromboembolism was calculated between groups using a Cox's proportional hazard model. The patients with the prothrombin mutation had a risk for spontaneous recurrent venous thromboembolism similar to that of patients with normal genotype (hazard ratio 1.3; 95% CI, 0.7-2.3). The circumstances of the first event (spontaneous or secondary) did not produce any substantial variation in the risk for recurrence. In conclusion, the carriers of the prothrombin mutation should be treated with oral anticoagulants after a first
deep venous thrombosis
for a similar length of time as patients with a normal genotype.
...
PMID:The risk of recurrent venous thromboembolism among heterozygous carriers of the G20210A prothrombin gene mutation. 1138 Apr 48
Skin ulceration is a well-characterized thrombotic complication of the heparin-induced thrombocytopenia (HIT) syndrome. We present the case of a 73-year-old diabetic woman nearing end-stage renal failure who developed extensive upper thigh, abdominal and buttock ulceration following initiation of subcutaneous heparin for prophylaxis against
deep vein thrombosis
. A preliminary diagnosis of calciphylaxis was made based on the classical distribution and macroscopic appearance of the ulceration in a patient with end-stage renal failure and secondary hyperparathyroidism. However skin biopsy showed complete absence of calcium deposits in the dermal microvasculature. The presence of extensive microthrombi within dermal vessels prompted serologic testing to detect a prothrombotic state. We identified the combined presence of heparin-dependent platelet activating (HIT) antibodies and functional
protein S
deficiency. To our knowledge this is the first reported case of a dialysis patient presenting with skin ulceration induced by heparin and
protein S
deficiency. This case highlights the importance of a skin biopsy and testing for a hypercoaguable state in patients with end-stage renal disease and skin ulceration. We suggest that HIT antibodies should be requested in all dialysis patients presenting with skin ulceration.
...
PMID:Heparin-induced skin necrosis in a patient with end-stage renal failure and functional protein S deficiency. 1150
Authors discussed the known risk factors of venous thromboembolism (VTE), which is complex disease with two manifestations:
deep venous thrombosis
(
DVT
) and pulmonary embolism (PE). Acquired risk factors of VTE are following: age over 40 years, bed rest, surgery, trauma, cancer, myocardial infarction, ischemic stroke, use of oral contraceptives, hormone-replacement therapy, pregnancy and puerperium, previous VTE, long lasting travel and presence of antiphospholipid antibodies. Group of genetic defects predisposing to thromboembolic events are called thrombophilia. The best known causes of thrombophilia are: resistance to activated protein C (factor V Leiden), the prothrombin 20210A, protein C deficiency,
protein S
deficiency, antithrombin deficiency, hyperhomocysteinemia and abnormality in the fibrinolytic system. Genetic predisposition to thrombosis may be detected in up to one-third of patients with VTER and more than 50% of patients with familial thrombosis. Detection of factor V Leiden is important for patients: with recurrent incidences of VTE, with other known causes of thrombophilia and in members of families with frequent occurrence of VTE. It is important also to detect deficiency of: protein C,
protein S
and especially of antithrombin in patient with previous VTE, because such patients have 8 to 10 fold increase risk of next incident of VTE. Chronic prevention of thrombosis should be used in all these cases.
...
PMID:[Risk factors of venous thromboembolism]. 1155 14
Sixty patients with thromboembolic complications from 1987 to 1997 at the Department of Pediatrics, Ramathibodi Hospital were retrospectively studied. Twenty patients were infants and 40 patients were children and adolescents with a mean age of 18 days and 8 years, respectively. The sites of thromboembolic complications were in the central nervous system, 27.5 per cent; skin as purpura fulminans or necrotic lesions, 24.5 per cent; gangrene of the toe, finger or colon, 19 per cent;
deep vein thrombosis
, 16 per cent; and other sites such as heart and lungs, 13 per cent. Most of them had triggering conditions (80%) and underlying diseases (76.7%) causing thromboembolism. The low levels of either antithrombin III, protein C or
protein S
were found in 42 per cent (15/36). The management included administration of standard or low molecular weight heparin if not contraindicated, replacement of fresh frozen plasma 10 ml/kg twice a day and treatment of underlying and triggering conditions. The fatality rate was 15 per cent (9/60). Subsequent episodes of thromboembolism occurred in 6 patients including: pulmonary emboli in one patient with protein C deficiency who refused warfarin administration,
deep vein thrombosis
in 2 patients with unidentified etiology, and necrotic skin lesions in 3 patients with vasculitis who did not respond to treatment. In conclusion, a comprehensive investigation and specific treatment for patients with thromboembolic complications are emphasized in order to prevent recurring episodes.
...
PMID:Thromboembolic complications in Thai pediatric patients. 1156 Feb 18
Since the first patient with antithrombin deficiency was reported, various hereditary thrombophilia have been discovered. However, we experienced a family line of multiple thrombosis in which known hereditary thrombophilia were all refuted. Case 1 died of inferior vena cava thrombosis at the age of 56 days. Case 2, the elder sister of Case 1, developed
deep vein thrombosis
of the left leg at age 2. She was started on warfarin but contracted
deep vein thrombosis
of the right leg at the age of 7. In the family of these cases there have been another five cases of thrombosis, spanning three generations, giving a total of seven cases. Six of the cases developed at an early age, below 50 years. Antithrombin, protein C,
protein S
, heparin cofactor II, soluble thrombomodulin, plasminogen, alpha 2 plasminogen inhibitor, and tissue factor pathway inhibitor were measured but there were no abnormalities, nor was there any resistance to activated protein C. The onset of thrombosis in this family is becoming younger with the passing of generations, and clinical symptoms have been showing a worsening tendency.
...
PMID:[A family with multiple thrombosis including infancy occurrence]. 1157 53
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