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Query: UMLS:C0409974 (
lupus
)
22,386
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Most patients with
lupus
anticoagulant (LA) activity have coincident antibodies to a group of negatively charged phospholipids, and its is suggested that LA and anticardiolipin tests detect antibodies with overlapping specificities. Some discordance between the two assays has been described, however. One patient presenting with severe thrombotic disease (recurrent
deep vein thrombosis
, pulmonary embolism, inferior venocaval obstruction, myocardial infarction, and digital gangrene) showed strong LA activity in February 1987. An enzyme linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) showed no binding to the negatively charged phospholipids cardiolipin, phosphatidylserine, and phosphatidic acid, but binding to zwitterionic phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) was demonstrated. Inhibition studies and affinity purification confirmed this finding. Interestingly, the serum did not bind to the kaolin cephalin clotting time reagent when used as antigen in an ELISA. The pathogenic significance of anti-PE antibodies and their relation to LA remains to be clarified. Further studies of the occurrence of anti-PE antibodies in patients with LA activity who have negative anticardiolipin tests are suggested.
...
PMID:Antibody to phosphatidylethanolamine in a patient with lupus anticoagulant and thrombosis. 249 57
A predisposition to thrombosis in patients with procainamide-induced
lupus
anticoagulants is previously unrecognized. We describe two patients treated with procainamide who experienced acute thromboembolic events temporally associated with development of the
lupus
anticoagulant. One patient had a
deep venous thrombosis
and pulmonary embolism, while the other patient had a cerebrovascular accident. In both patients, coagulation parameters corrected with interruption of procainamide therapy. We suggest that thrombosis may complicate treatment with procainamide in patients who develop the
lupus
anticoagulant.
...
PMID:Thrombosis associated with procainamide-induced lupus anticoagulant. 250 75
The clinical and serological findings in 13 patients with myocardial infarction and antiphospholipid antibodies (the '
lupus
anticoagulant', antibodies to cardiolipin, antibodies to phosphatidylethanolamine (one patient] seen by our unit and other units from 1984 to 1989, are presented (eight males and five females, ages ranging from 20 to 52 years). Five suffered myocardial infarction before the age of 30; four of these five were in their early 20s. Other risk factors such as excessive smoking (greater than 20 cigarettes a day) (two patients), long-term treatment with steroid (one) and use of oral contraceptives (one) were present. One patient had demonstrated a plasminogen activator deficiency and one a deficiency of protein C. Two patients developed myocardial infarction six to eight weeks after warfarin was discontinued for recurrent
deep vein thrombosis
. Six patients had SLE as defined by the revised 1982 criteria, three suffered from '
lupus
-like' disease, while four patients conformed to a 'primary' antiphospholipid syndrome.
...
PMID:Myocardial infarction and antiphospholipid antibodies in SLE and related disorders. 251 55
The presence of a
lupus
anticoagulant (LA) is paradoxically associated with a high incidence of arterial and venous thrombosis. In a patient with a
lupus
-like systemic disease, having received phenindione for 11 years, LA was discovered in association with recurrent
deep venous thrombosis
, a right atrial thrombus, coronary occlusion, arterial hypertension, thrombopenia, and anticardiolipin antibodies without anti-DNA antibodies. Renal cortical ischemia was detected by a tomographic scan. Renal biopsy showed glomerular ischemia and diffuse interstitial fibrosis. After a one-year anticoagulant and steroid therapy, LA has disappeared despite a high level of anticardiolipin antibodies, and renal function remains normal.
...
PMID:[Renal cortex ischemia, right atrial thrombosis and coronary occlusion in anti-phospholipid antibody syndrome]. 251 17
Antiphospholipid antibodies (APAs) may be identified in the laboratory by using either coagulation studies or solid-phase immunologic assays (ELISA; RIA). These methodologies do not necessarily evaluate the same antibody; consequently, it is appropriate to screen a patient's plasma by utilizing both assays. APAs have been associated with a variety of obstetrical complications including recurrent spontaneous abortion, intrauterine fetal death, early onset preeclampsia,
deep vein thrombosis
, and postpartum serositis syndrome. The Kaolin Clotting Time appears to be the most sensitive coagulation test for identifying the
lupus
anticoagulant. However, preliminary studies would suggest the presence of anticardiolipin antibodies as detected by solid-phase assays are more sensitive and predictive of the clinical course. Although there are no prospective trials to analyze treatment of patients with APA, preliminary data suggest the use of prednisone in combination with aspirin significantly improves the probability of delivery of a viable infant. In addition, heparin, intravenous gammaglobulin, and exchange plasmaphoresis have all been tried with varying degrees of success in individual patients in small series.
...
PMID:Antiphospholipid antibodies and reproduction. 251 82
Since most patients with thrombophilia in Israel are referred for diagnosis to our center, it was possible to estimate the relative frequency of the hereditary disorders leading to thrombophilia. 107 unrelated patients were evaluated over 4 years. Diagnoses were established in 23 patients (21.5%) while in 84 (78.5%) no abnormality was detected. Antithrombin III deficiency was found in 8 patients (7.5%), dominant protein C deficiency in 6 (5.6%), recessive homozygous protein C deficiency in 1, protein S deficiency in 3 (2.8%) and dysfibrinogenemia in 1. Four additional patients (3.7%) had a
lupus
anticoagulant. The frequency of
deep vein thrombosis
and pulmonary embolism was similar in patients with and without a definite diagnosis. Thrombosis of visceral or cerebral vessels and a positive family history were more frequent among patients in whom a definite diagnosis was made. In both groups there was a substantial lag between the time of presentation of the first thrombotic episode and the time of evaluation. Since the number of referred patients with thrombophilia has gradually increased over the period of the study, it is at present impossible to establish the prevalence of the various hereditary disorders leading to thrombophilia in the population.
...
PMID:The relative frequency of hereditary thrombotic disorders among 107 patients with thrombophilia in Israel. 252 86
A 34 year old man with a past history of
deep vein thrombosis
, positive
lupus
serology, and high titres of anticardiolipin antibodies developed acute adrenal insufficiency. Association of anticardiolipin antibodies with adrenal insufficiency has not been previously reported.
...
PMID:Acute adrenal insufficiency as a manifestation of the anticardiolipin syndrome? 238 70
Fifteen patients (9 females and 6 males) with the "lupus type" circulating anticoagulant have been studied. The underlying disease was an auto-immune disorder in 11 cases and a malignant hemopathy in 4 cases. The manifestations frequently associated with the
lupus
inhibitor, such as thrombosis, thrombocytopenia and false-positive VDRL test were analysed. Hemorrhagic syndrome occurred only when thrombocytopenia or acquired abnormality of Willebrand's factor was present. Thrombotic events (8 cases) were frequent.
Deep venous thrombosis
was complicated with pulmonary embolism in 4 patients. Platelet abnormality, decreased fibrinolytic response or acquired Willebrand's syndrome were found in all patients with a thrombotic event. These different manifestations followed diverging courses in some patients with persistent thrombocytopenia although the anticoagulant had disappeared in 3 cases, negativation of the false-positive VDRL test while the anticoagulant remained unchanged in 1 case, occurrence of a thromboembolic episode although the anticoagulant had disappeared in 1 case.
...
PMID:[Course of the manifestations associated with the antiprothrombinase circulating anticoagulant]. 293 5
Two patients with the
lupus
anticoagulant exhibited unusual cutaneous manifestations. They both fulfilled four criteria for systemic lupus erythematosus and had experienced
deep venous thrombosis
. The first patient suffered from a leg ulcer that resembled a pyoderma gangrenosum. The second patient presented erythematous and purplish macules on the fingertips. The histologic studies showed only microthrombosis in the dermal vessels without vasculitis, although such lesions in systemic lupus erythematosus are usually attributed to vasculitis. The association of these cutaneous lesions with
lupus
anticoagulant has never been reported. It is likely that this association is not fortuitous. After a review of the literature, it seems possible to individualize a new syndrome characterized by the presence of a subgroup of antiphospholipid antibodies. Thrombosis, spontaneous abortions, neurologic manifestations, pulmonary hypertension, positive results of a Coombs' test, and thrombocytopenia can be included in this syndrome, which overlaps with systemic lupus erythematosus. Certain cutaneous symptoms are associated with the presence of
lupus
anticoagulant or other antiphospholipid antibodies: leg ulcers, distal cutaneous ischemia, widespread cutaneous necrosis, and livedo. They can be considered as the dermatologic manifestations of this syndrome.
...
PMID:Cutaneous manifestations associated with the presence of the lupus anticoagulant. A report of two cases and a review of the literature. 309 56
A
lupus
inhibitor paradoxically prolongs phospholipid-dependent coagulation assays, but may increase risk of thromboembolism. We studied seven patients with cerebral infarcts and one with TIA who had
lupus
inhibitor. The average age at onset of cerebral ischemia was 41 years. Three patients had multiple cerebral ischemic events. The activated partial thromboplastin time was longer than that of controls, but usually within normal limits. Other abnormalities included biologic false-positive VDRL, antinuclear antibodies, thrombocytopenia (three patients each), and
deep vein thrombosis
(two patients).
...
PMID:Cerebral infarct, TIA, and lupus inhibitor. 309 32
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