Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0409974 (lupus)
22,386 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

10 consecutive patients fulfilled the diagnostic criteria for lupus anticoagulant. 4 had concomitant systemic lupus erythematosus, 1 Waldenstrom's disease and 5 had no apparent underlying disease. Only the case with Waldenstrom's disease presented a bleeding tendency, with bleeding time greater than 20 min; the others had a history of thrombotic complications. A defect of platelet aggregation induced by ADP, epinephrine, collagen and arachidonic acid was documented in the Waldenstrom's disease case whose lupus anticoagulant was an IgM. In the others, lupus anticoagulant, identified as IgG immunoglobulins, produced no aggregation abnormalities. However, beta-thromboglobulin levels in platelets, plasma and urine were consistent with a pattern of platelet activation in all cases. IgG immunoglobulins separated from sera of 6 patients showed lupus anticoagulant activity, with no effects on platelet aggregation of normal platelet-rich plasma, but they induced secretion of beta-thromboglobulin from normal platelets.
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PMID:Interaction between platelets and lupus anticoagulant. 296 26

Antiphospholipid (aPL) antibodies are of major interest not only because the lupus anticoagulant (LA) causes an inhibition of in vitro blood coagulation, but also because the presence of aPL antibodies confers a risk of thrombosis. The inhibition of in vitro phospholipid-dependent coagulation (LA) is thought to be caused by the binding of LA to procoagulant phospholipid surfaces, thus impeding the clotting process. Another class of aPL antibodies are those originally described to be directed against negatively charged phospholipids, in particular cardiolipin (ACA). ACA are usually directed against a complex antigen consisting of negatively charged phospholipid and a plasma protein, beta 2-glycoprotein I (beta 2-GPI). Further, there is antibody heterogeneity even within individual patients so that ACA and LA are separable using physicochemical techniques such as ion exchange chromatography and chromatofocusing. Using such techniques we have enriched Ig fractions for LA and ACA from two patient plasmas. The majority of Ig with LA activity had a pI of 7.2 to 7.3 whereas ACA had a pI of 5.0 to 5.2. Using these enriched fractions labeled with [125I]-iodine we have shown that LA binds to platelets in a specific and saturable manner. Binding is dependent on thrombin activation. [125I]-ACA behaves differently. Like LA, binding is specific and dependent on thrombin activation but in this case requires the presence of beta 2-GPI. ACA, in the presence of beta 2-GPI, competes for binding with LA suggesting the same or contiguous site. There is no cross-reactivity of these antibodies with GPIIb/IIIa and the most likely binding site is phospholipid. In neither case does LA nor ACA have an effect on thrombin-induced release of serotonin or beta-thromboglobulin nor do they affect platelet aggregation induced by a number of agonists. This antibody binding may play an etiological role in thrombocytopenia associated with aPL, but does not explain thrombosis on the basis of hyperaggregability or increased platelet release.
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PMID:Beta 2-glycoprotein I is a requirement for anticardiolipin antibodies binding to activated platelets: differences with lupus anticoagulants. 844 87

We reported an autopsy case of cerebral infarction with primary lung cancer. The patient was a 50-year-old man. Despite having been treated with warfarin potassium and ticlopidine hydrochloride, he relapsed cerebral infarction. His laboratory data on admission showed that lupus anticoagulant was positive, together with a high value of beta-thromboglobulin, thrombin-antithrombin III complex, markers of platelet and coagulation activation, CEA and CA 19-9. The autopsy finding revealed a primary papillary adenocarcinoma in the right lower lung, multiple cerebral infarction, renal infarction, pulmonary infarction and splenic infarction. The atherosclerotic changes were mild in the whole tissues and findings of vasculitis were not observed. Recurrence of cerebral infarction was effectively suppressed with the addition of steroid therapy to antithrombotic therapy. This case was considered as catastrophic antiphospholipid syndrome. It is necessary to differentiate antiphospholipid syndrome in case of the abnormal coagulation and fibrinolytic factors with recurrent cerebral infarction. Moreover, systemic examinations are important, because malignant tumor may exist on the background of the case.
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PMID:[An autopsy case of catastrophic antiphospholipid syndrome presenting with recurrent multiple cerebral infarction associated with lung cancer]. 1068 94