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

We studied a patient being treated with procainamide in whom we observed a high antinuclear antibody titer and prolonged activated partial thromboplastin (PTT), prothrombin (PT), and Stypven times (ST). Serum antibody concentrations against single-stranded DNA were elevated while those aginst native DNA were not elevated, suggesting the procainamide-induced lupus syndrome. Dilution of the patient's plasma with normal plasma failed to correct the PTT and PT, indicating the presence of an inhibitor(s) to blood coagulation. The anticoagulant activity was associated with the IgG fraction of the patient's serum. Addition of purified or partially purified human factors IX, X, VIII, VII, XIa, prekallikrein, high molecular weight kininogen, or phospholipids to the patient's plasma failed to correct the PTT, PT, or ST; however, purified human factor XII and prothrombin corrected the PTT and ST, respectively. These results indicate that production of antibodies directed against antigenic determinants on coagulation proteins can be a manifestation of procainamide-induced lupus erythematosus.
...
PMID:Circulating inhibitors of blood coagulation associated with procainamide-induced lupus erythematosus. 71 99

A 19-year-old primigravida with known factor XII deficiency (prepregnant factor XII level of 21%) presented with placental abruption and preterm labor at 26 weeks' gestation. A healthy 925-g female infant was born by spontaneous vaginal delivery. The mother had no postpartum hemorrhage or further complications, and the infant demonstrated no intracranial or other forms of hemorrhage up to 70 days of age. The infant's factor XII level was 34% (normal for her age). There are only two previous reports of factor XII deficiency in pregnancy cited in the English literature, and both were uncomplicated. In view of the risk of thromboembolic complications in nonpregnant individuals with factor XII deficiency, pregnant women with a prolonged activated partial thromboplastin time and no lupus anticoagulant or anticardiolipin antibody syndrome should also be investigated for deficiencies of factors VIII, IX, and XII. These patients should be given the appropriate counseling and should be monitored for features of thromboembolism if factor XII deficiency is confirmed.
...
PMID:Factor XII deficiency and pregnancy. 187 Aug 3

A 70 year old male patient admitted for coronary bypass surgery presented with a procainamide-induced lupus syndrome. This syndrome included a LLAC with a positive IgM ACA titer as well as a factor XII inhibitor. These drug-induced inhibitors were superimposed upon the patient's congenital deficiency of factor XI. The methods used to identify these abnormalities are described together with the replacement therapy employed to cover the surgical procedure. The long-term withdrawal of procainamide was associated with correction of all coagulation abnormalities except the factor XI deficiency.
...
PMID:Procainamide-induced circulating anticoagulants in a congenitally-deficient factor XI patient. 247 3

The Ortho activated partial thromboplastin time (APTT) reagent, Thrombosil 1 (TS), was compared to the General Diagnostics automated APTT reagent (GD). TS produced more precise results over a 38-day period of testing a normal control plasma, indicating that the upper limit of the normal range could be more precisely set with TS. This normal range was better represented if the normal values with both reagents were logarithmically transformed before calculating the mean +/- 2 SD. TS was more sensitive to plasma which had been heparinized in vitro. This was also demonstrated in vivo by the testing of 100 plasmas from heparinized patients. On testing of in-vitro dilutions of normal plasma with factor-deficient plasmas, TS was more sensitive to decreasing levels of factors VIII, IX and XI but less sensitive to decreasing factor XII. This was demonstrable in vivo in 71% of cases with plasmas from factor-deficient patients. GD was more sensitive to the lupus anticoagulant in most cases.
...
PMID:A comparison of two APTT reagents which use silica activators. 255 32

In a prospective study assessing haemostatic functions, the activated partial thromboplastin time was prolonged in 134 out of 10,229 patients studied, without an increase in the prothrombin or thrombin times; this abnormality persisted in only 37 of them on a new blood sample. A retrospective analysis was made of 265 patients who had such an isolated prolongation of the activated partial thromboplastin time on two successive blood samples: the causal abnormality remained unexplained in 135 patients; a well defined coagulation disorder without abnormal bleeding tendency was present in 110 patients (1 severe factor XII deficiency, 58 partial factor XI or XII deficiencies and 51 lupus anticoagulants); a bleeding disorder was diagnosed in 20 patients (8 haemophilias, 8 Von Willebrand's diseases, 4 factor VIII inhibitors). The well-iron efficacy of the activated partial thromboplastin time for detecting coagulation abnormalities is counter-balanced by some disadvantages such as the delay for biologic conclusions. In the preoperative assessment of haemostatic functions, rather than taking a routine approach, it would seem better to determine for each patient the need and the extent of biological testing according to the type of planned surgery, the clinical status of the patient and possible bleeding symptoms.
...
PMID:[Successes and failures of the activated partial thromboplastin time in the preoperative evaluation]. 308 57

A lupus or lupus-like inhibitor was detected in 57 patients: 24 systemic lupus erythematosus, 9 autoimmune diseases, 10 lymphoproliferative disease, 11 miscellaneous diseases and 3 asymptomatic patients. No hemorrhagic diathesis was observed in spite of major surgery. Thromboembolism occurred in 19 patients. Among them, 5 patients had recurrent abortions. An extensive study of coagulation profile compared different assays to investigate lupus-like inhibitor: the most sensitive assay was the partial thromboplastin time performed without activator. When performed with kaolin, it was the only assay detecting the lupus cofactor. Prothrombin time was prolonged in only 53% of the patients. Factors VIII, IX, XI and XII were in the normal range in 40% of the patients. When decreased, apparent deficiencies were usually not detectable on further dilutions of the test samples. In 7 patients factor XII antigen and activity were both decreased, suggesting an apparent factor XII deficiency. No relationship was observed between thromboembolic events, underlying disease or biological pattern.
...
PMID:Biological and clinical heterogeneity of lupus and lupus-like anticoagulant in fifty-seven patients. 348 Sep 33

Inhibitors blocking coagulation reactions, often called lupus anticoagulants, are readily identifiable but rarely considered as risk factors for cerebral infarction. These inhibitors are inconsistently found in a number of diseases (often autoimmune) and after treatment with ceretain drugs and appear to be closely associated with, or identical to, antibodies to certain phospholipids. We have observed two brothers with these inhibitors who both experienced recurrent cerebral infarctions. Such familial occurrence has rarely been reported. In addition, some other family members were found to have depressed factor XII levels. Using the technique of double immunodiffusion, we found that the serum from these brothers formed precipitin lines against certain phospholipid substrates, lending further support to the antiphospholipid nature of this inhibitor.
...
PMID:Recurrent cerebral infarctions in two brothers with antiphospholipid antibodies that block coagulation reactions. 394 92

Methods are described to measure fibrinolysis in healthy persons and in patients with systemic lupus erythematosus. Using the fibrin plate method, total fibrinolytic activity and vascular plasminogen activator were measured. (Total fibrinolytic activity expresses the fibrinolytic potential and consists of both the intrinsic [factor XII-dependent and independent] activities and the extrinsic activities [vascular or tissue type]. Vascular plasminogen activator, assessed in a separate assay, refers to the endothelium-derived component only.) In addition, the degree of inhibition by plasma of both urokinase-induced and of plasmin-induced fibrinolysis were analyzed. Vascular plasminogen activator levels were low in 63% of plasma samples from 55 patients with systemic lupus erythematosus. The level of an inhibitor of plasminogen activation was significantly elevated in 87% of patients and levels of an inhibitor of plasmin were significantly elevated in 29%. The nonspecific serine protease inhibitors, including alpha 2-macroglobulin, were within the normal range in all patients. The natures of inhibitor of plasminogen activation and plasmin inhibitor were studied further. Using both the fibrin plate and the lysis time methods, the data indicated that the urokinase-inhibiting activity increased with time of incubation of plasma-enzyme mixtures, whereas the plasmin inhibiting activity did not. Elevated levels of plasmin inhibitor measured with the fibrin plate method correlated well with prolonged lysis times. Results using the chromogenic substrate S-2251, commonly used as a simple and specific assay for antiplasmin, agreed reasonably well with those using the fibrin plate method, but elevated plasmin inhibitor levels could be quantitated with greater accuracy and sensitivity by the fibrin plate method. Studies with an antiserum directed against alpha 2-antiplasmin showed that inhibitor of plasminogen activation and plasmin inhibitor were different inhibitors, and that plasmin inhibitor was identical to alpha 2-antiplasmin. The abnormalities are discussed in the light of current knowledge on fibrinolysis and as possible mediators in the pathogenesis and perpetuation of lupus glomerulonephritis.
...
PMID:Fibrinolysis in health and disease: severe abnormalities in systemic lupus erythematosus. 623

Lupus anticoagulants are a group of antibodies commonly found in patients with autoimmune diseases such as systemic lupus erythematosus. Lupus anticoagulants inhibit phospholipid dependent coagulation and may bind to negatively charged phospholipids. Recent studies have suggested an association between anti-beta 2-glycoprotein I and a lupus anticoagulant, whose activity is frequently dependent on the presence of beta 2-glycoprotein I. Based on these observations, the effect of anti-beta 2-glycoprotein I on the autoactivation of factor XII in plasma was investigated. Autoactivation initiated by the presence of negatively charged phospholipids, but not by sulfatide, was strongly inhibited by immunoaffinity purified anti-beta 2-glycoprotein I. The dose-response curve of anti-beta 2-glycoprotein I was identical with that of a precipitating antibody, showing no inhibition at low and high antibody dilutions and maximal inhibition at an intermediate dilution. At high antibody concentrations, an increased rate of factor XIIa activation was observed. This increase was of the same magnitude as the decreased rate observed in plasma supplemented with the same amount of beta 2-glycoprotein I as in the plasma itself. This confirms the inhibitory effect of beta 2-GP-I on the contact activation and shows that inhibition is effective on the autoactivation of factor XII in plasma. The inhibitory action of beta 2-glycoprotein I was independent of the inhibition caused by the anti-beta 2-glycoprotein I/beta 2 glycoprotein I complex suggesting a synchronized inhibition of factor XII autoactivation by beta 2-glycoprotein I and anti-beta 2-glycoprotein I. The inhibition caused by the antibody is suggested to be caused by a reduced availability of negatively charged phospholipids due to the binding of the anti-beta 2-GP-I/beta 2-GP-I complex. This complex may be a lupus anticoagulant.
...
PMID:Synchronized inhibition of the phospholipid mediated autoactivation of factor XII in plasma by beta 2-glycoprotein I and anti-beta 2-glycoprotein I. 748 6

Resistance to Activated Protein C (APC) was evaluated using 3 different methods: two of them were based on the prolongation of the Activated Partial Thromboplastin Time (APTT) using 2 different APTT reagents in the presence of APC, whereas the third method was based on the prolongation of prothrombin time when APC is added. The three methods were significantly correlated. APTT-based assays were sensitive to factor XII deficiency, whereas thromboplastin-based assay was sensitive to factor VII deficiency (< 0.5 UI/ml), which surestimates the response to APC. In contrast, an increase in factor VIII (F. VIII) level is associated with a decreased response to APC, when APTT-based assays are used, whereas thromboplastin-based assay is unmodified. During pregnancy, a decreased response to APC is observed, which is not only due to the increase in F. VIII, since thromboplastin-based assay is also modified. In Protein S (PS) immuno-depleted plasma, the low response to APC is corrected by addition of free PS: the thromboplastin-based assay was the most sensitive one to PS deficiency. However, in patients with congenital PS deficiency, there was no correlation between APC-resistance and free PS level. In patients with lupus anticoagulant, discrepancies were observed between the 3 methods, but with a high frequency of low response to APC. For the 3 assays, there was a good differentiation and correlation between normal and pathological results, the thromboplastin-based assay being perhaps the most discriminating. However, 3 unrelated thrombophilic patients showed normal results using thromboplastin-based assay, although they were APC-resistant using APTT-based assays. For 2 patients, this discrepancy can be explained by high levels of F. VIII. For the last patient, an abnormal F. VIII, resistant to APC can be suspected.
...
PMID:Resistance to activated protein C: evaluation of three functional assays. 781 60


1 2 3 4 Next >>