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Query: UMLS:C0409974 (
lupus
)
22,386
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A patient without a history of bleeding or thromboembolism presented with an activated partial thromboplastin time (aPTT) of 55.1 s (normal 24-38 s). Incubation of the patient plasma with an equal volume of normal plasma failed to correct the aPTT, suggesting the presence of an inhibitor. The MRVVT (modified Russell Viper venom time) was normal, and the anti-cardiolipin antibody titres were not elevated, indicating that the presence of a
lupus
anticoagulant was unlikely. Plasma prekallikrein (PK) measured by a coagulant assay (2 U/dl) was very low, but PK was in the low normal range (approximately 65%) when measured by an enzymatic assay (amidolytic) or by an antigenic assay (ELISA). The purified patient IgG reacted with purified PK, the heavy chain, and the 28 kD fragment of the heavy chain, indicating that it contained an autoantibody to PK. The purified IgG did not directly inhibit the amidolytic activity of kallikrein, but it did inhibit the activation of PK to kallikrein by activated
factor XII
. Activation of the contact system by dextran sulphate, as reflected by the cleavage of HK on a Western blot, was inhibited when the patient IgG was added to pooled normal plasma. The antibody appears to be oligoclonal with IgG1 being most abundant, followed by IgG4. This report appears to be the first of a spontaneously occurring antibody to prekallikrein.
...
PMID:An autoantibody to human plasma prekallikrein blocks activation of the contact system. 794 59
Prothrombin fragment 1 + 2 (F1 + 2) and thrombin-antithrombin-III-complex (TAT) levels were compared in 31 orally anticoagulated patients with inferior vena caval filters and a control group of 31 orally anticoagulated patients without caval filters and the incidence of markers of thrombophilia (deficiency of antithrombin-III, protein C, protein S and
factor XII
, presence of
lupus
anticoagulants) was determined. 8 of 31 patients (26%) from the group of caval filter carriers showed markers of thrombophilia (3 protein S deficiencies, 1 protein C deficiency, 2
factor XII
deficiencies and 2 patients with
lupus
anticoagulants). In all orally anticoagulated patients a significant interdependence (p < 0.05) between F1 + 2- and TAT-levels and intensity (INR) of the oral anticoagulation could be observed. Comparison of F1 + 2- and TAT-levels of caval filter carriers and controls revealed no significant difference which leads to the conclusion that inferior vena caval filters do not induce detectable systemic activation of prothrombin under adequate oral anticoagulation therapy.
...
PMID:[Prothrombin fragment 1+2 (F1+2), thrombin-antithrombin III complex(TAT) and thrombophilia parameters in orally anticoagulated patients with inferior vena cava filters]. 851 4
In conclusion, a revised view of the contact system has been presented. This system has little to do with the initiation of hemostasis. Like
lupus
anticoagulants, deficiencies of contact proteins give prolonged APTTs but may be risk factors for thrombosis. BK from kininogens is a potent modulator of vascular biology inducing vasodilation, tissue plasminogen activator release, and prostacyclin liberation. Kininogens, themselves, are selective inhibitors of alpha-thrombin-induced platelet activation preventing alpha-thrombin from cleaving the cloned thrombin receptor after arginine41. Kininogens' alpha-thrombin inhibitory activity exists in intact kininogens, BK, and all of BK's breakdown products. HK also is the pivotal protein for contact protein assembly on endothelium. It is the receptor for prekallikrein which when bound to HK becomes activated to kallikrein by an endothelial cell enzyme system independent of activated forms of plasma
factor XII
. Prekallikrein activation on endothelial cells results in kinetically favorable single chain urokinase and plasminogen activation. Thus the "physiologic, negatively charged surface" for contact system activation is really the assembly of these proteins on cell membranes and activation by membrane-associated enzymes.
...
PMID:Contact activation: a revision. 919 36
We have developed an automated chromogenic peptide substrate assay for
factor XII
(FXIIcs) on a Cobas Mira S Plus clinical chemistry analyser using a new commercially available kit. This was used to determine
factor XII
(FXII) levels in plasma samples from 320 blood donors, 206 patients with a history of venous thrombosis and 74
lupus
anticoagulant positive (LA+) patients. Results were compared with those obtained in a clotting assay for FXII (FXIIct) and an immunochemical assay (FXIIag). A satisfactory correlation coefficient of 0.92 and a regression line equation of y = 7.898 + 0.871x was obtained between FXIIcs and FXIIct in the 320 blood donors. Levels of FXII below the calculated normal range were found in nine blood donors (2.8%) and 16 venous thrombosis patients (7.8%). The blood donors and patients with venous thrombosis with low FXIIcs values had FXII levels below our lower limits of normal for both FXIIct and FXIIag; all were
lupus
anticoagulant negative. When FXII levels were determined in the 74 LA+ patients, 27 (36.5%) gave markedly lower FXII values in the FXIIct when compared with the FXIIcs. FXIIag levels corresponded with FXIIcs. The automated FXIIcs assay is therefore
lupus
anticoagulant insensitive and allows us to measure FXII levels accurately and routinely in large numbers of patient samples.
...
PMID:An automated chromogenic peptide substrate assay for coagulation factor XII. 962 17
Falsely low levels of
factor XII
(FXII) have been documented in patients who are
lupus
anticoagulant positive (LA+). In addition, we have previously noted a surprisingly high incidence (20.9%) of apparently true FXII deficiency in patients who were LA+. We have hypothesised that this may be partly due to the presence of antibodies to FXII. The aim of the present study was to investigate whether LA+ patient plasmas contain antibodies directed either against FXII or FXII in association with phospholipids. Plasma samples from 60 blood donors, all LA negative, and 51 LA+ patients were tested using ELISA assays employing purified FXII, phosphatidylserine (PS) and phosphatidylethanolamine (PE). We have identified seven patients whose plasma contained either IgG or IgM that reacted with purified FXII in the absence of PS or PE. When PS was included in the assay system four additional patient plasmas were shown to contain either IgG or IgM that reacted with FXII. The plasma of one patient contained IgG that reacted with FXII both in the presence and absence of PS. There was no reactivity to FXII with either IgG or IgM when PE was included in the assay system. Affinity purified IgG from three patients whose plasma reacted with FXII in the ELISA assay in the absence of PS, gave a positive reaction in an immunoblot assay. These results suggest that FXII antibodies are present in a significant proportion of LA+ patients and may lead to an erroneous diagnosis of FXII deficiency.
...
PMID:Antibodies to factor XII associated with lupus anticoagulant. 1010 66
A 26-year-old female presented with an episode of severe mucus membrane bleeding. Investigations revealed prolonged prothrombin time (PT), and partial thromboplastin time (PTT), normal thrombin time (TT) and reptilase time, thrombocytopenia, a positive test for
lupus
anticoagulant (LA), as well as anti-cardiolipin antibodies (ACL). A toxicology screen for toxic drugs and coumadin was negative. Coagulation factor assays revealed low levels for factor II and XII. Low level inhibitor to factor II was demonstrated. Patient had a negative VDRL test and positive anti-nuclear antibodies (ANA). The diagnosis of acquired hypoprothrombinaemia secondary to circulating inhibitor induced by LA was made, and then the patient was started on prednisone, which led to cessation of the bleeding and normalization of PT and PTT, as well as an increase of factor II and
factor XII
levels. A few months later, the patient developed arthralgia and alopecia, and antibodies against double-stranded DNA were detected, and the diagnosis of systemic
lupus
erythematosis (SLE) was confirmed. The patient continued to have mild prolongation of PT and PTT while on a low dose of prednisone, but she had no bleeding symptoms. A computed tomography scan of the brain was carried out for unexplained central nervous system (CNS) symptoms, and it revealed mild hydrocephalus, which was thought to be part of the CNS manifestations of SLE. It was concluded that patients with SLE may present with haemostatic defects that are a result of either platelet-related causes (quantitative or qualitative) or coagulation factor deficiency secondary to circulating inhibitor, or both, in the absence of other features of SLE which may appear later.
...
PMID:Systemic lupus erythematosus presenting with haemorrhagic manifestation. 1067 97
Antibodies to
factor XII
(FXII) have previously been identified in some patients who were
lupus
anti-coagulant-positive. The relationship between these antibodies and FXII levels appeared to be variable. The aim of the present study was to confirm the presence of antibodies to FXII in patients with well characterized antiphospholipid syndrome (APS) and to establish their potential effect on levels of FXII. Forty-two patients with APS were studied; 21 patients were found to have either immunoglobulin (Ig)G or IgM antibodies to FXII by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) using a highly purified preparation of FXII (> 99% pure). Levels of FXII were statistically significantly lower (P = 0.02) in patients with antibodies to FXII when compared with patients without antibodies to FXII (median = 91 micro/dl, s.d. = 39.1, median = 122 micro/dl, s.d. = 41.1 respectively). Four of the 21 patients with antibodies to FXII were found to have FXII levels below the laboratory normal range. Antibodies to FXII are present in significant numbers of patients with APS and may lead to acquired FXII deficiency.
...
PMID:Reduced factor XII levels in patients with the antiphospholipid syndrome are associated with antibodies to factor XII. 1099 86
We have attempted to establish a systematic pathogenetic analysis of thrombophilia by including assays of antithrombin III(AT III), protein C(PC), protein S(PS), fibrinogen, plasminogen and heparin cofactor II by both functional and immunological methods as well as detecting
lupus
anticoagulants. Such a comprehensive scheme was instrumental in systematically identifying and confirming the pathogenesis of 164 cases which otherwise would have escaped detection since 1994 in our laboratory (Kyushu University Hospital). The analysis was conducted on 485 consecutive patients with venous thrombosis, arterial thrombosis and disorders in which small vessel thrombosis were implicated. Hundred and sixty four patients, (40% of the examined patients), were found to have low activities of PS, PC, ATIII etc. Among them, seventy five patients(46%) had low PS activity, and twenty nine(18%) had low PC activity. Genetic analyses performed on specimens with low PS/PC activities resulted in the confirmation of 24 genetic abnormalities. Such genetic abnormalities, however, does not solely lead to the pathogenesis of thromboses. We have found that some genetic polymorphisms, such as PS Tokushima,
factor XII
46C allele, were also additional risk factors for thromboses.
...
PMID:[Genetic polymorphism and risk of thromboses]. 1130 10
Forty female patients with either primary anti-phospholipid syndrome (n = 26) or systemic lupus erythematosus (anti-phospholipid syndrome positive) (n = 14) were investigated for levels of
factor XII
, the presence of
lupus
anticoagulant and antibodies to cardiolipin, beta 2-glycoprotein I and
factor XII
. Twenty-one patients had a history of recurrent fetal loss (> 2, mean = 2.6).
Lupus
anticoagulant positivity showed a weak association with recurrent fetal loss (odds ratio = 1.1). While there was no association between the presence of antibodies to cardiolipin or beta 2-glycoprotein I with recurrent fetal loss, antibodies to
factor XII
showed a strong and statistically significant association (odds ratio = 5.4, P = 0.025).
...
PMID:Antibodies to factor XII and recurrent fetal loss in patients with the anti-phospholipid syndrome. 1138 Apr 30
Hereditary plasma prekallikrein (PK) deficiency was diagnosed in a 71-year-old man with an 8-year history of osteomyelofibrosis. PK deficiency was suspected in view of a severely prolonged activated partial thromboplastin time (aPTT) that nearly normalized following prolonged preincubation (10 min) of patient plasma with kaolin-inosithin reagent. Hereditary PK deficiency was demonstrated by very low PK values in the propositus (PK clotting activity 5%, PK amidolytic activity 5%, PK antigen 2% of normal plasma, respectively) and half normal PK values in his children. Normalization of a severely increased aPTT (>120 s) after prolonged preincubation with aPTT reagent occurred in plasma deficient in PK but not in plasma deficient in
factor XII
(FXII), high-molecular-weight kininogen (HK), factor XI (FXI), factor IX, factor VIII, Passovoy trait plasma or plasma containing
lupus
anticoagulant. Autoactivation of FXII in PK-deficient plasma in the presence of kaolin paralleled the normalization of aPTT. Addition of OT-2, a monoclonal antibody inhibiting activated FXII, prevented the normalization of aPTT. We conclude that the normalization of a severely prolonged aPTT upon increased preincubation time (PIT), characteristic of PK deficiency, is due to FXII autoactivation.
...
PMID:Prekallikrein deficiency: the characteristic normalization of the severely prolonged aPTT following increased preincubation time is due to autoactivation of factor XII. 1209 Oct 43
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