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Query: UMLS:C0220723 (
PCA
)
4,687
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Viral infections result in alterations in hemostasis and coagulation. It has previously been shown that susceptibility to murine hepatitis virus strain 3 (MHV-3), a coronavirus, correlates directly with the spontaneous, T lymphocyte-instructed expression of a procoagulant monokine that exhibits
prothrombin
-cleaving activity (procoagulant activity [
PCA
]). A biologic role for
PCA
in the pathogenesis of MHV-3 infection is suggested by results of in vivo microscopic observations made during acute MHV-3 infection. Recently, it has been demonstrated that prostaglandin E2 abrogates the induction of
PCA
by MHV-3 both in vivo and in vitro and prevents hepatic necrosis and the associated microcirculatory changes. These data suggest that MHV-3 induces cellular injury through the activation of the coagulation cascade and provide further evidence for a role for
PCA
in the pathogenesis of MHV-3 infection.
...
PMID:Activation of the immune coagulation system by murine hepatitis virus strain 3. 254 45
The effect of diflunisal on steady-state warfarin dynamics and kinetics was studied in five healthy men taking daily subtherapeutic doses of warfarin. Diflunisal 500 mg twice daily for 2 wk increased the percentage unbound warfarin from 1.02% to 1.24% and lowered total warfarin from 741 to 533 ng/ml, but did not alter the anticoagulant response (
prothrombin
complex activity,
PCA
). When diflunisal was discontinued but warfarin continued, there was a loss of anticoagulant effect and a difference in the rates at which percentage unbound warfarin and total warfarin concentration returned to prediflunisal levels. There was a correlation between plasma diflunisal and percentage unbound warfarin. Diflunisal reduced both the maximum plasma protein-binding capacity for warfarin and the apparent association constant.
...
PMID:Interaction between diflunisal and warfarin. 740 9
We designed a randomized, double-blind study to assess the analgesic efficacy and safety of perioperative ketorolac infusion in 95 patients undergoing cholecystectomy. The ketorolac group (n = 48) received premedication, combined with ketorolac 30 mg intramuscularly (IM), followed by a ketorolac continuous infusion (2 mg/h). The control group (n = 47) received an IM bolus of NaCl 0.9% (1 mL) followed by continuous saline infusion (2 mL/h) for 24 h. Operative blood losses, postoperative pain, sedation, and on-demand morphine consumption (patient-controlled analgesia [
PCA
]) were measured. The effects on plasma catecholamines, cortisol, potassium, creatinine, skin bleeding time,
prothrombin
time (PT), and partial thromboplastin time (PTT) were also evaluated. Ketorolac improved pain scores (P < 0.05) and reduced plasma cortisol concentrations between 2 and 6 h (P < 0.05). No significant differences were observed concerning operative blood losses, glucose concentration, and renal and hemostatic functions. The ketorolac group required less morphine (not significant [NS]) than the control group and had less adverse effects (P = 0.002). Thus, perioperative ketorolac infusion improved the quality of postoperative pain relief, and had no major influence on endocrine-metabolic response and no negative influences on hemostatic and renal functions. This study suggests that preventive ketorolac administration, followed by a continuous infusion, is an easy, useful, and safe method for pain control after abdominal surgery.
...
PMID:The effects of perioperative ketorolac infusion on postoperative pain and endocrine-metabolic response. 810 70
The hypercoagulable state caused by the use of recombinant human granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (rhG-CSF) has been cited in anecdotal reports. Since tissue factor (TF) is the main initiator of the coagulation cascade, we examined if rhG-CSF had an inductive effect on the TF-dependent pathway in 18 healthy donors receiving rhG-CSF (10 microg/kg/day x 5 days) for peripheral blood progenitor cell mobilization. After rhG-CSF, there were increases both in TF antigen (TF:Ag) (P=0.01) and TF procoagulant activity (TF:
PCA
) (P=0.06) plasma levels and in TF:Ag cytofluorimetric expression on CD33 (+) cells (P=0.04). Mean activities of FVIII and vWF also increased significantly. Thrombin time was slightly prolonged (P=0.06) due to significant increases in plasma D-dimer levels. In addition, while FIX activity remained stable, there were marked reductions in mean plasma FX and FII activities and a slight decrease in FVII activity that resulted in a significant prolongation of
prothrombin
time within normal ranges. In conclusion, the administration of rhG-CSF led to a "prothrombotic state" via stimulation of TF and increased endothelial markers, such as F VIII and vWF. In the light of these findings, the use of rhG-CSF for stem cell mobilization should be undertaken cautiously in healthy donors with underlying thrombotic risk factors.
...
PMID:Administration of granulocyte-colony-stimulating factor for allogeneic hematopoietic cell collection may induce the tissue factor-dependent pathway in healthy donors. 1464 51
Tissue factor (TF) is the physiological initiating mechanism for blood coagulation. Platelets play an important role in monocyte TF expression, thrombosis and inflammation. Aspirin, clopidogrel and cilostazol, which inhibit platelet responses by different mechanisms, are widely used in patients with arterial diseases. We tested the hypothesis that platelet-inhibiting agents inhibit the levels of circulating TF procoagulant activity (TF-PCA) in patients with peripheral arterial disease (PAD). Twenty-six patients with lower extremity PAD, average age 65.9 +/- 8.4 years (mean +/- SEM), were studied at baseline and following sequential two-week treatment regimens with aspirin (325 mg daily), clopidogrel (75 mg daily) or a phosphodiesterase inhibitor cilostazol (100 mg twice daily) singly, and with each possible combination of these agents. Circulating TF-
PCA
in whole blood, and plasma factor VIIa,
prothrombin
fragment F1.2, thrombin-antithrombin complexes (TAT), and P-selectin were measured. Baseline TF-
PCA
levels in the patients were elevated (131 +/- 19 U/ml) compared to control subjects (23 +/- 2, p < 0.0001). TF-
PCA
levels declined following treatment with clopidogrel alone, and with combinations of clopidogrel with aspirin or cilostazol, with the lowest levels being with the triple-drug combination. Plasma P-selectin declined in all treatment groups. No changes were noted in plasma factor VIIa, F1.2 or TAT. In conclusion, treatment of PAD patients with antiplatelet agents decreases circulating TF, a molecule with prothrombotic and proinflammatory effects. These findings suggest an unrecognized mechanism, beyond inhibiting aggregation responses, for the efficacy of antiplatelet drugs in patients with arterial diseases.
...
PMID:Effect of antiplatelet agents clopidogrel, aspirin, and cilostazol on circulating tissue factor procoagulant activity in patients with peripheral arterial disease. 1713 67
The tissue factor (TF) pathway is the primary mechanism for initiation of blood coagulation. Circulating blood contains TF, which originates mainly from monocytes and is thrombogenic. The presence of somatostatin (SMS) receptors on monocytes suggests the possibility that SMS may regulate TF synthesis and/or release. Circulating TF procoagulant activity (TF-PCA), factor VIIa activity (FVIIa; clotting assays), TF antigen (TF-Ag; ELISA),
prothrombin
fragment 1.2 (F1.2), thrombin-antithrombin complexes (ELISAs), CD40 ligand expression on platelets, and monocyte-platelet aggregates (flow cytometry) were determined in blood from normal volunteers undergoing 24 h of basal glucose/basal insulin (BG/BI) clamps and high-glucose/high-insulin (HG/HI) clamps with and without SMS. Infusions of SMS under basal conditions (BG/BI) raised TF-
PCA
1.8-fold (P < 0.03), TF-Ag 2.3-fold (P < 0.001), and TF expression on monocytes by 36% (P < 0.001) and decreased plasma levels of FVIIa by 30% (P < 0.001). Infusion of SMS reduced the 8.6-fold HG/HI-induced increase in TF-Ag by 26% and the 8.6-fold increase in TF-
PCA
by 100%. SMS also prevented the 60% increase in TF expression on monocytes, the 2.2-fold increase in F1.2, the 40% increase in CD40L expression on platelets, and the 17% increase in monocyte-platelet aggregates seen during HG/HI. We conclude that SMS completely prevented HG/HI-induced TF activation in normal volunteers and may be of use to reduce the procoagulant state and acute vascular events in hyperinsulinemic insulin-resistant patients with type 2 diabetes.
...
PMID:Differential effects of somatostatin on circulating tissue factor procoagulant activity and protein. 1721 71
Alterations in blood coagulation may explain the poorer neurological outcome with diabetes mellitus and hyperglycemia after acute ischemic stroke. We studied the relationships between diabetes mellitus, hyperglycemia, whole blood tissue factor procoagulant activity (TF-PCA) and plasma factorVIIa (FVIIa) in ten patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus and 11 non-diabetic patients at baseline and 6, 12, 24, and 48 hours (h) after presentation for acute stroke. In addition, we examined plasma
prothrombin
fragment 1+2 (F1.2) and thrombin-antithrombin complexes (TAT) as markers of thrombin generation. Stroke severity, assessed by National Institute of Health Stroke Scale (NIHSS), was similar at baseline (p=0.26) but worse in diabetic (8.20+/-4.3) than nondiabetic patients (2.67+/-2.1, p=0.023) at 48 h. At presentation, diabetic patients had higher FVIIa (p=0.004) and lower TF-
PCA
(p=0.027) than non-diabetic patients but both were higher than in normal control subjects. FVIIa levels remained higher in diabetic patients at 6, 12 and 24 h after stroke. In diabetic patients, FVIIa (r=0.40, p=0.02) and TF-
PCA
(r=0.50, p=0.02) correlated with blood glucose; and, FVIIa correlated with plasma F1.2 (r=0.34, p=0.002) and TAT levels (r=0.62, p<0.0001). In non-diabetic patients, TF-
PCA
, but not FVIIa, correlated with F1.2 (r=0.402, p=0.010) and TAT (r=0.39, p=0.011). Combining both groups, NIHSS scores were positively related to FVIIa levels (r=0.50, p=0.021) and inversely related to TF-
PCA
levels (r=-0.498, p=0.02). Acute ischemic stroke patients with diabetes and hyperglycemia have a more intense procoagulant state compared with nondiabetic patients. This is related to glucose levels and provides a potential mechanism for the observed worse prognosis in such patients after acute stroke.
...
PMID:Factor VIIa and tissue factor procoagulant activity in diabetes mellitus after acute ischemic stroke: impact of hyperglycemia. 1800 Jun 5
Activated platelets contribute to the arrest of bleeding by forming aggregates at sites of vascular injury and by providing a surface for assembling enzyme complexes involved in fibrin formation (platelet procoagulant activity;
PCA
). Impairment in the latter property of platelets has been observed in some disorders of hemostasis. In Scott syndrome, there is a defect in membrane vesiculation and in the surface expression of phosphatidylserine (PS), the phospholipid that is necessary for assembling the factor VIIIa/IXa (tenase) and factor Va/Xa (prothrombinase) complexes involved in thrombin formation. A family with an isolated defect in vesiculation, but normal prothrombinase activity, has also been reported. In the Quebec platelet disorder, overexpression of the fibrinolytic enzyme urokinase-type plasminogen activator results in the degradation of alpha-granule proteins, including factor V, and a specific abnormality in platelet factor V is the basis for the prothrombinase defect in platelet factor V-New York. The impaired prothrombinase activity in patients with delta-storage pool deficiency may be due to a failure to provide sufficient amounts of secreted adenine nucleotides which, when bound to P2 purinergic receptors, are necessary to maintain the intracellular Ca (2+) levels that are required for the surface expression of PS. Platelet prothrombinase activity and thrombin potential in patients with Glanzmann thrombasthenia (GPIIb-IIIa deficiency) may be decreased, normal, or increased, depending on the experimental conditions, for reasons that are not currently clear. The most consistent platelet
PCA
abnormality in the Bernard-Soulier syndrome (GPIb-complex deficiency) is an abnormally short serum
prothrombin
time, associated with a defect in the process by which an interaction between fibrin, von Willebrand factor, and GPIb promotes
PCA
.
...
PMID:Impaired platelet procoagulant mechanisms in patients with bleeding disorders. 1940 96