Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P00750 (PLA)
16,800 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

During normal pregnancy, the concentrations of many of the clotting factors rise, thereby increasing the potential to generate fibrin. There is also evidence of increased thrombin activity during normal pregnancy which sharply increases during placental separation. Antithrombin III, the main inhibitor of thrombin and activated factor X, shows no compensatory rise during pregnancy but increases during the puerperium. Plasminogen and antiplasmin concentrations rise during pregnancy but systemic fibrinolytic activity, as measured by the euglobulin lysis time, is markedly depressed during pregnancy; the reduced fibrinolytic activity returns to non-pregnant values very soon after delivery. The loss of fibrinolytic activity is presumed to be loss of plasminogen activator, because when this is added in excess in the urokinase sensitivity test, the fibrinolytic response is normal. The capacity for localized fibrinolytic activity is not lost, however, because fibrinolytic degradation products are slightly raised during pregnancy. The overall pattern is one of increased coagulant and reduced fibrinolytic capacity during pregnancy which may protect the pregnant woman against the haemostatic challenge of placental separation.
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PMID:Blood clotting and fibrinolysis in pregnancy. 38 69

Plasma levels of antithrombin III, alpha 2-macroglobulin and inter-alpha-trypsin inhibitor, as well as those of various clotting, complement and other plasma factors, were significantly decreased in 18 patients suffering from hyperdynamic septic shock. A similar statistically significant reduction of the concentrations of several plasma factors (prothrombin and antithrombin III, plasminogen and alpha 2-plasmin inhibitor, complement factor C3 and clotting factor XIII) was observed in experimental endotoxaemia. In this model the reduction in the plasma levels of these factors was considerably diminished by the intravenous injection of a granulocytic elastase--cathepsin G inhibitor of lower molecular weight from soybeans. The results of both studies indicate that consumption of plasma factors in the course of Gram-negative sepsis proceeds not only via the classical routes (by activation of the clotting, fibrinolytic and complement cascades by system-specific proteinases such as thrombokinase or the plasminogen activator) but also to an appreciable degree of unspecific degradation of plasma factors by neutral proteinases such as elastase and cathepsin G. The endotoxin-induced release of both sorts of proteinases, the system-specific ones and the unspecific lysosomal proteinases from leucocytes and other cells, is likely to be mainly responsible for the consumption of antithrombin III and alpha-2-macroglobulin via complex formation (followed by elimination of the complexes) and the increased turnover of the inter-alpha-trypsin inhibitor as observed in the clinical study. The therapeutic use of an exogenous elastase--cathepsin G inhibitor in the experimental model was stimulated by the observation that human mucous secretions contain and acid-stable inhibitor of the neutral granulocytic proteinases, called HUSI-I or antileucoproteinase. This inhibitor protects mucous membranes and soluble proteins against proteolytic attack by leucocytic proteinases released in the course of a local inflammatory response. Preliminary results indicate that HUSI-I, which is produced by the epithelial cells of mucous membranes, does not belong to any known structural type of acid-stable proteinase inhibitor. The search for other candidates suitable for medication in humans led to the discovery of a potent elastase--cathepsin G inhibitor, called eglin, in the leech Hirudo medicinalis. This acid-stable inhibitor with a molecular weight close to 8100 has an unusual structural property in that the structure of the molecule is not stabilized by any disulphide bridge.
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PMID:Proteinase inhibitors in severe inflammatory processes (septic shock and experimental endotoxaemia): biochemical, pathophysiological and therapeutic aspects. 39 95

The administration of ascorbic acid (1g/day) to healthy adults did not significantly influence the levels of serum cholesterol, plasminogen activator activity, plasminogen, fibrinogen, FR-antigen, partial thromboplastin time, platelet adhesiveness, a-1-antitrypsin or a-2-macroglobulin over the 3-month period of study.
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PMID:The effeCt of vitamin c supplements on serum cholesterol, coagulation, fibrinolysis and platelet adhesiveness. 80 25

An asymptomatic woman (Ms. Williams) was found to have a severe abnormality in the surface-activated intrinsic coagulation, fibrinolytic, and kinin-generating pathways. Assays for known coagulation factors were nromal while Fletcher factor (pre-kallikrein) was 45%, insufficient to account for the observed markedly prolonged partial thromboplastin time. Plasminogen proactivator was present at 20% of normal levels and addition of highly purified plasminogen proactivator containing 10% plasminogen activator partially corrected the coagulation and fibrinolytic abnormalities but not the kinin-generating defect. This effect was due to its plasminogen activator content. In addition, Williams trait plasma failed to convert prekallilrein to lakkilrein or release kinin upon incubation with kaolin. Kininogen antigen was undetectable. When normal plasma was fractionated to identify the factor that corrects all the abnormalities in Williams trait plasma, the Williams factor was identified as a form of kininogen by its behavior on ion exchange chromatography, gel filtration, disc gel electrophoresis, and elution from an anti-low molecular weight kininogen immunoadsorbent. High molecular weight kininogen as well as a subfraction of low molecular weight kininogen, possessed this corrective activity while the bulk of low molecular weight kininogen functioned only as a kallikrein substrate. Kininogen therefore is a critical factor required for the functioning of Hageman factor-dependent coagulation and fibrinolysis and for the activation of prekallikrein.
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PMID:Williams trait. Human kininogen deficiency with diminished levels of plasminogen proactivator and prekallikrein associated with abnormalities of the Hageman factor-dependent pathways. 120 89

Extracapillary glomerulonephritis are associated with fibrin deposition in the urinary space of the glomerulus. Such deposits were correlated with the severity of the disease and with a poor renal outcome. Fibrin formation involves an activation of the coagulation cascade either through the intrinsic pathway, Hageman factor being activated by the altered glomerular basement membrane, either by the extrinsic pathway, infiltrating monocytes and glomerular cells exhibiting a procoagulant activity i.e. thromboplastin or tissue factor. Treatments with heparin or warfarin were shown to decrease the severity of experimental glomerular diseases. A similar beneficial effect was obtained with a monocyte-depleting serum and more recently with a treatment by a tissue type plasminogen activator. Glomerular cells also produce a fibrinolytic activity which could be too low or uneffective on extracapillary fibrin deposits if they contain high amounts of plasminogen activator inhibitors. Thrombin has procoagulant activity, antifibrinolytic activity and has cellular chemotactic and proliferative effects. It could play a major role in the pathogenesis of crescent formation.
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PMID:[Role of hemostasis in the formation of crescents in extracapillary glomerulonephritis]. 129 84

Rethrombosis of the infarct-related artery after pharmacologic thrombolysis is a major limitation of the thrombolytic therapy. Platelet and fibrin deposition in the coronary artery after recombinant tissue-type plasminogen activator (rTPA) may play a leading role in reformation of thrombus. Therefore we examined the effect of low molecular weight heparin (LMWH) as adjunctive treatment with rTPA in a dog model of electrically induced intracoronary thrombus. Fourteen dogs, in which a stable coronary thrombus was induced with delivery of 100 microA of anodal direct current, were randomly given an intravenous bolus of LMWH, 75 IU/kg (n = 6), or saline (n = 8), followed by intravenous rTPA, 1 mg/kg over 20 minutes. LMWH (75 IU/kg) or saline was continuously infused over 90 minutes after rTPA-induced thrombolysis. Reperfusion occurred at 29 +/- 7 minutes in six of eight dogs receiving rTPA plus saline (reperfusion rate 75%), while reperfusion occurred at 18 +/- 3 minutes in all six dogs receiving rTPA plus LMWH (both p = NS versus rTPA plus saline group). Coronary reocclusion occurred in 83% of dogs given rTPA plus saline, but only in one dog (17%) given rTPA plus LMWH (p less than 0.05). Magnitude of reflow at 60 minutes of reperfusion was higher in the rTPA plus LMWH group than in the rTPA plus saline group (51 +/- 14 ml/min versus 10 +/- 9 ml/min; p less than 0.05). As expected, partial thromboplastin time was greater in rTPA plus LMWH than in rTPA plus saline-treated animals.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Adjunctive therapy with low molecular weight heparin with recombinant tissue-type plasminogen activator causes sustained reflow in canine coronary thrombosis. 132 29

The mesothelium contains both procoagulant and fibrinolytic activities. An imbalance between these activities could account for the abnormal fibrin turnover and pleural fibrin deposition that is characteristic of pleural inflammation. Procoagulant activity of human pleural mesothelial cells (HPMC) is in part due to tissue factor, and the prothrombinase complex can also assemble at the HPMC surface. HPMC express tissue plasminogen activator (tPA) but no detectable fibrinolytic activity in a fibrin plate assay. Inhibition of HPMC fibrinolytic activity is due, in part, to elaboration of plasminogen activator inhibitors-1 and -2 (PAI-1 and PAI-2) as well as antiplasmins. Synthesis of PAI-1 and PAI-2 is inhibited by actinomycin D and cyclohexamide. HPMC PAI-1 is increased by transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta) and tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha), as is tPA release, while PAI-1 mRNA is unchanged and tPA mRNA is increased. PAI-2 release is induced by TNF-alpha and TGF-beta. Because they are a rich source of PAI-1 and PAI-2, HPMC may contribute to the high levels of these inhibitors in pleural exudates. Stimulation of HPMC by TNF-alpha or TGF-beta in vitro did not alter HPMC procoagulant activity nor the balance of elevated PAI and antiplasmins relative to PA, changes that collectively favor formation and persistence of pericellular fibrin.
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PMID:Pathways of fibrin turnover of human pleural mesothelial cells in vitro. 138 10

The aim of our study was to determine the fibrinolytic potential in a large group of patients with Cushing's disease. These patients had a significant shortening of the activated partial thromboplastin time and increase in factor VIII/von Willebrand factor complex compared to normal controls. The mean levels of plasminogen, tissue plasminogen activator (t-PA) antigen and plasminogen activator inhibitor (PAI) activity were significantly higher than in normal subjects, whereas the basal fibrinolytic activity was similar to that seen in the control group. In 17 out of 30 Cushing patients and in 17 normal subjects the fibrinolytic potential was determined with the venous occlusion test. In the Cushing group, the release of t-PA antigen after 20 min of venous occlusion was comparable to that observed in the control group. However, Cushing patients showed a lower fibrinolytic activity than normal subjects, since a lesser shortening of the euglobulin lysis time and a non-significant rise of plasminogen activator activity levels were found. Moreover, in these patients the PAI activity values remained unchanged and significantly increased after venous occlusion test also. In conclusion, the impaired fibrinolytic activation seen in Cushing patients after venous occlusion can be explained by the inhibitory effect of the high PAI levels on plasminogen activators. The defective fibrinolytic potential could further contribute to the hypercoagulable state in Cushing's disease. High PAI levels before surgery may represent an additional risk factor for post-surgical thromboembolic complications in Cushing patients.
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PMID:The fibrinolytic potential in patients with Cushing's disease: a clue to their hypercoagulable state. 148

Successful coronary thrombolysis depends on rapidly restoring blood flow and maintaining patency of the infarct-related artery. Although widely used as an adjunct to lytic therapy, heparin is limited in its ability to produce these effects. Since the limitations of heparin may reflect its inability to inactivate clot-bound thrombin, we developed a rat model of tissue plasminogen activator (t-PA) induced thrombolysis to compare doses of heparin, hirudin, hirulog (a synthetic hirudin-derived peptide), and D-Phe-Pro-ArgCH2Cl (PPACK) that produced a 4-fold prolongation of the baseline activated partial thromboplastin time (APTT) with saline in terms of their ability to accelerate thrombolysis and to prevent reocclusion. A thrombus rich in red cells and fibrin was formed in the distal aorta by applying an external constrictor after denuding the endothelium with a balloon catheter. Thrombolysis was induced with t-PA (1 mg/kg bolus, followed by 1 mg kg-1 h-1 over 30 min) and the rats were then randomized to receive a concomitant 80 min infusion of a thrombin inhibitor or saline. By continuously monitoring blood flow and pre- and post-stenotic blood pressures, the time to clot lysis, and the number of reocclusions were determined. Compared to saline, heparin had no significant effect on these variables.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:The effect of thrombin inhibitors on tissue plasminogen activator induced thrombolysis in a rat model. 151 74

Sixty-one patients with different degrees of liver failure, 23 with Child-Pugh class B and 38 with Child-Pugh class C, were studied and observed for 3 yr. Coagulation index analysis showed significantly lower values of prothrombin activity, more prolonged activated partial thromboplastin time, higher bilirubin and fibrinogen degradation products values in class C patients. Among all patients, 28 had fibrinogen degradation products values greater than 10 micrograms/ml, and in these patients a hyperfibrinolytic state was confirmed by higher values of circulating plasminogen activator antigen (17.3 +/- 8.7 ng/ml vs. 5.41 +/- 1.9 ng/ml; p less than 0.0001) and activity (6.6 +/- 2.1 IU/ml vs. 1.92 +/- 1.12 IU/ml; p less than 0.0001) and significantly lower plasminogen activator inhibitor antigen (6.4 +/- 3.5 ng/ml vs. 15.8 +/- 5.6 ng/ml; p less than 0.0001) and activity (3.6 +/- 2.2 IU/ml vs. 8.5 +/- 3.9 IU/ml; p less than 0.0001). Patients with positive fibrinogen degradation products had higher serum bilirubin (6 +/- 4 mg/dl vs. 2 +/- 2 mg/dl; p less than 0.0001) and lower fibrinogen (156 +/- 52 mg/dl vs. 194 +/- 62 mg/dl; p less than 0.02) than patients without hyperfibrinolysis. During the follow-up period, 41 patients died, 22 from fatal gastrointestinal hemorrhage and 19 from liver failure. Thirty patients experienced fatal (22 patients) and nonfatal (8 patients) gastrointestinal hemorrhage. Patients with positive fibrinogen degradation products or class C had a higher risk of gastrointestinal bleeding than patients with negative fibrinogen degradation products (odds ratio = 8) or class B (odds ratio = 3.5), respectively.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Hyperfibrinolysis increases the risk of gastrointestinal hemorrhage in patients with advanced cirrhosis. 155 45


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