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Query: UMLS:C0409974 (
lupus
)
22,386
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Phospholipids bearing a proportion of anionic species such as phosphatidylserine are necessary to promote the anticoagulant potential of the
protein C
pathway. Factor Xa (200 or 350 pM) was found to activate
protein C
in a thrombomodulin-independent reaction requiring only phospholipids in Al(OH)3,-adsorbed plasma resupplemented with physiological concentrations of
protein C
(70 nM) and protein S (130 nM). All experiments were performed in the presence of an excess of hirudin. The activity of activated protein C was assessed by the survival of factor Va. The optimal phospholipid concentration range was 5 to 25 microM with a proportion of phosphatidylserine of 50% (mol/mol) resulting in a half-life of factor Va of 7.5 min in the absence of protein S and 4.2 min in its presence. Dns-EGR-Xa, an inactive derivative of factor Xa, behaved as an apparent protector of factor Va. When replacing factor Xa, thrombin at 10 nM was not an efficient
protein C
activator in the absence of purified human placenta thrombomodulin. In the presence of 100 pM activated protein C, factor Va half-life was 2 min in the absence of protein S and 1.1 min in its presence in the above optimal phospholipid concentration range. The presence of protein S allowed reduction of phospholipid requirements. Annexin-V (placental anticoagulant protein-I), a potent phospholipid antagonist, fully protected factor Va from degradation by phospholipid-dependent mechanisms. Factor Va was partially protected in the plasma of a patient having experienced thrombosis associated with
lupus
-like anticoagulant and anti-phospholipid auto-antibodies.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:The catalytic role of anionic phospholipids in the activation of protein C by factor Xa and expression of its anticoagulant function in human plasma. 179 56
New details have been added to the description of the antiphospholipid antibody syndrome. These include quantitation of risk of stroke; delineation of an associated acute occlusive vasculopathy syndrome, including its pathology; increased awareness of the association of adrenal insufficiency with antiphospholipid antibody; new demonstration of placental pathology in cases of fetal death; and new details on the persistence or transience of antibody in patients with systemic lupus erythematosus. There are several animal models for the antiphospholipid antibody syndrome. Assay standardization and reproducibility issues, more for the
lupus
anticoagulant than for the enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay for antiphospholipid antibody, remain as important barriers to progress. Antibody characteristics of activity, isotype, and subclass must be considered in assay interpretation; antigen characteristics of fatty acid chain and lipid phase are also important variables. Other circulating proteins may have clinical importance. Several laboratories have commented that antiphospholipid antibody interferes with
protein C
. A cofactor, apolipoprotein H, enhances binding of some antiphospholipid IgG antibodies. Other phospholipid-binding proteins are known. Isolation, purification, and perhaps cloning of many of these factors should lead to a better understanding of the pathogenesis of the syndrome.
...
PMID:Antiphospholipid antibody and antiphospholipid antibody syndrome. 183 43
Pulmonary hypertension due to recurrent thromboembolism is a rare disease but life-threatening. We evaluated 18 patients (11 female, 7 male) with this pathology between 1973 and 1991. We compared clinical features and evolution of our patients with the ones of the literature. The mean interval between beginning of symptoms and diagnosis was 5 years (range 1-10 years) and the most frequent symptom was increasing dyspnoea. In 2 of our patients there were well definite predisposing causes for thromboembolism (intracardiac catheters), 6 of the others had a previous episode of acute pulmonary embolism. Mean pulmonary arterial pressure was 50 mmHg and low output was present in 8 of these. Lung perfusion scintigraphy was diagnostic in 98% of cases showing segmental defects and pulmonary angiography confirms diagnosis revealing abrupt cut-off of cases showing segmental defects and pulmonary angiography confirms diagnosis revealing abrupt cut-off a major pulmonary artery. Angiographic evaluation of thrombus extent and location was difficult. In a small number of patients was found
lupus
anticoagulant, deficiency of
protein C
, of protein S and of antithrombin III. Mortality in medical treatment was 39% at a mean follow-up of 4-5 years. Progression of pulmonary hypertension was due to recurrent pulmonary embolism only in 30-40% of cases. The role of caval filter is not well established. Thromboendarterectomy shows immediate good results at short time but the long-term results are not known.
...
PMID:[Thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension]. 184 71
The central nervous system (CNS) is clinically involved in approximately 40% of all systemic
lupus
erythematosis (SLE) patients. Minor psychiatric symptoms and abnormalities on neuropsychological testing are being detected with increasing frequency. This review summarizes current thinking concerning the diagnosis and pathogenesis of CNS
lupus
. The main symptoms of CNS
lupus
can be diffuse (generalized seizures, psychosis) or focal (stroke, peripheral neuropathies). Neuropsychiatric symptoms often occur in the first year of SLE, but are rarely the presenting symptoms of the disease. In studies on the pathology of CNS
lupus
, vasculopathy, infarcts and haemorrhages are often observed, whereas vasculitis is rare. Endocardial lesions and mural thrombi have also been reported in 33-50% of CNS
lupus
patients. In diagnostic imaging of the CNS, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans often provide evidence for edema or small infarcts, both in focal and diffuse CNS
lupus
, whereas computerized tomography (CT) scans only show gross abnormalities. The first reports on position emission tomography (PET) scans in CNS
lupus
patients show decreased glucose uptake in the brain. The cerebral blood flow decreases during active diffuse and focal CNS
lupus
. The blood-brain barrier is somewhat more frequently impaired in diffuse CNS
lupus
. Intrathecal IgG and IgM production is observed in 25-66% of all CNS
lupus
patient. Various specificities of autoantibodies have been observed in CNS
lupus
. Of these, anticardiolipin (ACA) antibodies show a well-documented association with focal involvement of the CNS in SLE. These antibodies could cause thrombosis by interfering with the
protein C
pathway of fibrinolysis. In addition, they are associated with endocardial and valvular heart disease, which is often observed in SLE and which could cause embolism. The relation between ACA and diffuse CNS
lupus
is not yet clear. Low-avidity anti-DNA antibodies are also found in CNS
lupus
, possibly because of their cross-reaction with cardiolipin. Antineuronal antibodies and lymphocytotoxic antibodies have been associated with diffuse CNS
lupus
and abnormalities on neuropsychological testing. However, the population of these antibodies is rather heterogeneous and it has not been possible to assess a common target antigen. Therefore, it is still obscure whether there is also a second immune-mediated mechanism responsible for the development of the diffuse form of CNS
lupus
.
...
PMID:Diagnosis and pathogenesis of CNS lupus. 186 69
Forty-six patients with refractory malignant lymphoma (Hodgkin's and non-Hodgkin's) admitted for autologous marrow or peripheral blood stem cell transplantation (ASCT) were evaluated for the presence of hemostatic abnormalities known to be associated with a hypercoagulable state in other patient populations. All patients had received numerous chemotherapeutic agents in the past and often radiation therapy as well. Hemostatic abnormalities were found to be common in these patients. The most frequent finding was hyperfibrinogenemia, present in 35% of patients. Decreased
protein C
activity was present in 32% of patients. Protein C antigen was low in only one individual and protein S was normal or increased in all patients. Low levels of antithrombin III were present in 16%. Plasminogen activator inhibitor was elevated in 20%. Anticardiolipin antibodies were present in 29% of patients; other evidence of a
lupus
anticoagulant was present in only eight patients. The frequency of each hemostatic abnormality was similar for patients with Hodgkin's disease (HD) and those with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL) despite the fact that significantly more patients with HD had received irradiation and/or previous splenectomy than patients with NHL. We conclude that multiple prothrombotic abnormalities of hemostasis are present in patients with refractory lymphoma referred for ASCT. Whether these are the result of lymphoma or the result of therapy cannot be determined from this study.
...
PMID:Prothrombotic hemostatic abnormalities in patients with refractory malignant lymphoma presenting for autologous stem cell transplantation. 187 94
Increased thrombogenesis observed in systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is derived from multiple mechanisms, including: Enhanced coagulation factor VIII:VWf activity,
lupus
anticoagulants, anti-phospholipid antibodies, acquired deficiencies of natural anti-thrombotic mechanisms (
protein C
, protein S, anti-thrombin III), and impaired fibrinolytic mechanisms. We studied the fibrinolytic mechanisms of 18 patients with systemic lupus erythematosus, selected carefully to avoid other possible causes of abnormalities in the fibrinolytic activity. Despite the fact that the euglobulin lysis time in steady state was normal in all instances, disturbances in the tissue plasminogen activator/plasminogen activator inhibitor (TPA/PAI) system were found in all SLE patients: TPA activity was undetectable in all cases, whereas it was above 0.4 IU/ml in a control group. In 72 percent of patients, the undetectable TPA activity was correlated with abnormally high PAI activity; PAI levels were normal in all members of the control group, their mean value being 0.74 versus 8.63 IU/ml for SLE patients (P less than .01). Coagulation
protein C
deficiency was found in 3 patients (17%). Even though within normal range, fibrinogen levels were significantly higher in SLE than in normal controls (219 versus 192 mg/dl, P less than .01) and plasminogen levels were significantly higher in SLE than in controls (117 versus 78.2%, P less than .01). Cross-linked fibrin derivatives (D-D dimers) were negative in all patients with SLE. Sixty-eight percent of SLE patients had high levels of antiphospholipid antibodies, but no correlation with the disturbances of the TPA/PAI system was found. It is concluded that most patients with SLE display severe abnormalities in the TPA/PAI anti-thrombotic system and that these abnormalities may be related to the
lupus
thrombophilia, apparently multifactorial in its origin.
...
PMID:Disturbances in the tissue plasminogen activator/plasminogen activator inhibitor (TPA/PAI) system in systemic lupus erythematosus. 190 23
To elucidate the mechanism of vascular thrombosis in patients with systemic lupus erythematosus and the
lupus
anticoagulant changes in factors associated with haemostasis were investigated. The
lupus
anticoagulant was associated with an increased incidence of thrombosis, particularly cerebral thrombosis. Concentrations of fibrinopeptide A and fibrinopeptide B beta 15-42 were significantly raised in the plasma of patients with systemic lupus erythematosus and the anticoagulant compared with concentrations in patients without the
lupus
anticoagulant. The tendency towards formation of thrombosis was not found in all
lupus
patients with the anticoagulant, however. Concentrations of thromboxane B2 were remarkably raised in the plasma of the two patients with the
lupus
anticoagulant who had recently had thrombosis. Concentrations of 6-keto-prostaglandin F1 alpha,
protein C
, antithrombin III, and plasminogen were similar in both groups. No significant decrease in serum stimulatory activity on prostacyclin production by cultured aortic endothelial cells was noted in
lupus
patients with the anticoagulant, but inhibition was present in the two patients with recent thrombosis. These results indicate that although patients with the
lupus
anticoagulant are not always in a hypercoagulable state, haemostatic abnormalities found in some patients with the anticoagulant may be predictive of thrombotic events.
...
PMID:Haemostatic factors associated with vascular thrombosis in patients with systemic lupus erythematosus and the lupus anticoagulant. 190 17
We have identified an inhibitor of the
protein C
anticoagulant pathway in the plasma of a patient with systemic lupus erythematosus and a history of recurrent deep vein thrombosis, fetal wastage, and seizures. The patient's plasma contained anticardiolipin antibodies as well as a weak
lupus
anticoagulant. Examination of this patient's plasma revealed normal levels of
protein C
and protein S antigen, normal levels of functional
protein C
, as well as essentially normal levels of every blood coagulation factor. In a modified prothrombin time assay, the activated protein C-mediated prolongation of the clotting time observed in normal plasma was not observed in this patient's plasma. Gel permeation chromatography of the patient's plasma revealed that the inhibitory material was a high molecular weight protein that coeluted with the IgM peak. The inhibitor did not appear to circulate as a complex with
protein C
, since the inhibitor could easily be separated from
protein C
during fractionation procedures, and did not interfere with the activation of
protein C
in plasma as assessed by a functional amidolytic assay. Our findings suggest that the recurrent thrombotic episodes observed in this patient may have occurred as a result of the patient's antiphospholipid antibody neutralizing specific phospholipids essential for the full expression of the anticoagulant activity of activated protein C.
...
PMID:Impairment of the protein C anticoagulant pathway in a patient with systemic lupus erythematosus, anticardiolipin antibodies and thrombosis. 210 91
We determined the following coagulo-fibrinolytic activities in 24 patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) and 20 healthy adults: prothrombin time (PT), activated partial thromboplastin time (A-PTT), factor VIII: coagulant activity), von Willebrand factor antigen (vWF: Ag), antithrombin-III (AT-III), plasminogen (PLG), alpha 2 plasmin inhibitor (alpha 2 PI), alpha 2-plasmin inhibitor-plasmin complex (PIC),
protein C
(PC: activity and antigen concentration), and protein S (PS: total PS and free PS). PLG, AT-III, PC antigen concentration and total PS were significantly decreased in ten female controls as compared with ten male controls. Therefore, we used the ten healthy females as controls and excluded two male SLE patients in the analysis of the correlations of coagulo-fibrinolytic activities with
lupus
anticoagulant (LA), clinical and laboratory features in 22 female patients with SLE. In the SLE patients, PT was significantly shortened, while A-PTT was prolonged. PLG, PC activity and antigen, and total PS were significantly increased, and free PS levels were decreased in SLE. The shortened PT and decreased free PS suggest hypercoagulable states in SLE patients. A significant prolongation of A-PTT and a decrease of F VIII activity were observed in the six LA-positive SLE patients, and the results were considered as known effects of LA. Furthermore, vWF: Ag, AT-III and PC antigen levels were significantly increased in the LA-positive patients as compared with LA-negative patients. These changes indicate both vascular endothelial cell damages and a compensatory increase in coagulation inhibitors in the LA-positive patients.
...
PMID:[Regulation of coagulo-fibrinolytic activity and lupus anticoagulants in systemic lupus erythematosus]. 212 31
The 5-year experience with a panel of laboratory tests designed to identify patients with high risk of thromboembolism was reviewed. This panel included an activated partial thromboplastin time and reptilase time as well as specific assays for antithrombin III,
protein C
, protein S, and plasminogen. One hundred and nine patients were evaluated by this panel. Conditions predisposing to thrombosis were identified in 24 of these patients and these conditions included: dysfibrinogenemia,
lupus
anticoagulant, and deficiencies of antithrombin III,
protein C
and protein S. The limitations of this panel are also discussed.
...
PMID:Laboratory identification of conditions predisposing to thrombosis. 214 45
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