Search results for "coagulation factor"

showing 10 items of 45 documents

Coagulation factors and proteinase inhibitors in the plasma of children with acute lymphoblastic leukoses. Behaviour before and during treatment acco…

1984

The thrombocyte count, the factor XIII (F XIII) activity, the concentration of fibrinogen (F I), prothrombin (F II), fibronectin (CIG), albumin and the proteinase inhibitors antithrombin III (AT III), alpha 2-macroglobulin (A2M), alpha 1-antitrypsin (A1A) and Cl-esterase inactivator (Cl-INA) were determined in ten children with acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL). Changes due to the disease and to therapy were observed. Before the start of treatment the patients had thrombocytopenia secondary to the disease, and the proteinase inhibitors--especially Cl-INA and A1A--were raised. During the induction phase the thrombocyte count rose but there was also a marked increase in the concentration of…

Malemedicine.medical_specialtyAdolescentAntithrombin IIIAlpha (ethology)Complement C1 Inactivator ProteinsFibrinogenMaintenance therapyInternal medicineDrug DiscoveryAntineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy ProtocolsmedicineHumansProtease Inhibitorsalpha-MacroglobulinsChildGenetics (clinical)Factor XIIIbusiness.industryAntithrombinAlbuminFibrinogenGeneral MedicineFactor XIIIMolecular medicineBlood Coagulation FactorsFibronectinsLeukemia LymphoidEndocrinologyCoagulationChild Preschoolalpha 1-AntitrypsinImmunologyMolecular MedicineFemaleProthrombinbusinessmedicine.drugKlinische Wochenschrift
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Management of Kidney Transplantation in a Factor VII-Deficient Patient: Case Report

2012

Transplantation in patients with congenital bleeding disorders is a challenge requiring an integrated approach of various specialists. Renal transplantation, the most frequent type of solid organ transplantation, is rarely performed in individuals with congenital hemorrhagic disorders. We performed a renal transplantation in a 53-year-old man with end-stage renal disease and congenital coagulation factor VII deficiency, a rare bleeding disorder with a peculiar clinical picture requiring replacement therapy in surgical interventions. Perioperative bleeding was successfully prevented by administration of recombinant activated factor VII. Treatment schedule, administration rate, and long-term …

Malemedicine.medical_specialtyDiseaseHemorrhagic disorderchemistry.chemical_compoundHumansMedicinekidney transplatation congenital bleeding disorders factor VII deficiency recombinant factor VII major surgerykidney transplantation inherited coagulation disorderCoagulation factor VIIKidney transplantationTransplantationFactor VIIbusiness.industryPerioperativeMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseKidney TransplantationSurgeryTransplantationchemistryTreatment ScheduleFeasibility StudiesKidney Failure ChronicSurgerybusiness
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Missense mutations in the coagulation factor XII (Hageman factor) gene in hereditary angioedema with normal C1 inhibitor.

2006

Hereditary angioedema is characterized by recurrent skin swelling, abdominal pain attacks, and potentially life-threatening upper airway obstruction. The two classic types are both caused by mutations within the complement C1 inhibitor gene. A recently described new type does not show a deficiency of C1 inhibitor and affects almost exclusively women. We screened twenty unrelated index patients with this new type of hereditary angioedema for mutations in the coagulation factor XII gene. Two different missense mutations were identified in exactly the same position within exon 9 of the F12 gene. 'Mutation 1' (1032C-->A), encountered in five patients, predicts a threonine-to-lysine substitution…

Malemedicine.medical_specialtyGenetic LinkageBiophysicsMutation MissenseCoagulation Factor XIImedicine.disease_causeBiochemistryC1-inhibitorInternal medicinemedicineMissense mutationHumansHereditary Angioedema Type IIIAngioedemaMolecular BiologyMutationFactor XIIAngioedemabiologyChemistryCell Biologymedicine.diseasePedigreeEndocrinologyHereditary angioedemaImmunologyFactor XIIbiology.proteinFemalemedicine.symptomComplement C1 Inhibitor ProteinBiochemical and biophysical research communications
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Hereditary Angioedema with Normal C1 Inhibitor

2013

Until recently it was assumed that hereditary angioedema was a disease that results exclusively from a genetic deficiency of the C1 inhibitor. In 2000, families with hereditary angioedema, normal C1 inhibitor activity, and protein in plasma were described. Since then, numerous patients and families with that condition have been reported. Most of the patients were women. In many of the affected women, oral contraceptives, hormone replacement therapy containing estrogens, and pregnancies triggered the clinical symptoms. In some families mutations in the coagulation factor XII (Hageman factor) gene were detected.

Malemedicine.medical_specialtyImmunologyCoagulation Factor XIIC1-inhibitorDiagnosis DifferentialPregnancyRisk FactorsInternal medicinemedicineHumansImmunology and AllergyHereditary Angioedema Type IIIAngioedemaFactor XIIbiologyAngioedemabusiness.industryAngioedemas Hereditarymedicine.diseaseEndocrinologyTransgender hormone therapyFactor XIIMutationHereditary angioedemabiology.proteinFemaleDifferential diagnosismedicine.symptombusinessComplement C1 Inhibitor ProteinImmunology and Allergy Clinics of North America
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Health status and quality of life of elderly persons with severe hemophilia born before the advent of modern replacement therapy

2009

SUMMARY BACKGROUND: More and more people with severe hemophilia reach an old age thanks to an effective treatment. There is no information on the health status and quality of life of elderly people with hemophilia born at a time when replacement therapy was hardly available. METHODS: Italian patients with severe hemophilia, aged >or=65 years and hence born in 1942 or earlier, were compared with elderly men without bleeding disorders matched for age, sex, geography and social status. The following aspects were evaluated: concomitant illness, orthopedic status, physical functioning and cognitive status. Measurements of generic and disease-specific health-related quality of life were also obta…

Malemedicine.medical_specialtyPediatricshamophilia healt status agingActivities of daily livingHealth StatusPopulationActivities of Daily Living; Aged; Blood Coagulation Factors; Hemophilia A; Humans; Italy; Male; Health Status; Quality of LifeHemophilia ASettore MED/15 - Malattie Del SangueQuality of lifehemic and lymphatic diseasesArthropathyActivities of Daily LivingMedicineHumanseducationDepression (differential diagnoses)Agededucation.field_of_studybusiness.industryHematologymedicine.diseaseBlood Coagulation FactorsItalyConcomitantOrthopedic surgeryPhysical therapyQuality of LifebusinessSocial status
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Irreversible gelation of thermally unfolded proteins:structural and mechanical properties of lysozyme aggregates

2010

The formation of protein aggregates is important in many fields of life science and technology. The morphological and mechanical properties of protein solutions depend upon the molecular conformation and thermodynamic and environmental conditions. Non-native or unfolded proteins may be kinetically trapped into irreversible aggregates and undergo precipitation or gelation. Here, we study the thermal aggregation of lysozyme in neutral solutions. We characterise the irreversible unfolding of lysozyme by differential scanning calorimetry. The structural properties of aggregates and their mechanisms of formation with the eventual gelation are studied at high temperature by spectroscopic, rheolog…

Models MolecularProtein FoldingCircular dichroismGelationProtein ConformationDiffusionBiophysicsProtein aggregationUnfoldingchemistry.chemical_compoundDifferential scanning calorimetryProtein structureAnimalsQuantitative Biology::BiomoleculesChemistryPrecipitation (chemistry)Circular DichroismTemperaturePercolationGeneral MedicineBlood Coagulation FactorsSettore FIS/07 - Fisica Applicata(Beni Culturali Ambientali Biol.e Medicin)Thermal irreversibilityCrystallographyChemical physicsThermodynamicsMuramidaseProtein foldingLysozymeProtein aggregation
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Hereditary combined deficiency of the vitamin K-dependent clotting factors

2010

Abstract Hereditary combined vitamin K-dependent clotting factors deficiency (VKCFD) is a rare congenital bleeding disorder resulting from variably decreased levels of coagulation factors II, VII, IX and X as well as natural anticoagulants protein C, protein S and protein Z. The spectrum of bleeding symptoms ranges from mild to severe with onset in the neonatal period in severe cases. The bleeding symptoms are often life-threatening, occur both spontaneously and in a surgical setting, and usually involve the skin and mucosae. A range of non-haemostatic symptoms are often present, including developmental and skeletal anomalies. VKCFD is an autosomal recessive disorder caused by mutations in …

Vitaminmedicine.medical_specialtyVitamin KCoagulation Factor Deficiencylcsh:MedicineReviewGastroenterologyProtein SProtein SSettore MED/15 - Malattie Del Sanguechemistry.chemical_compoundBlood Coagulation Disorders InheritedInternal medicineVitamin K deficiencymedicineHumansGenetics(clinical)Pharmacology (medical)VITAMIN K DEPENDENT CLOTTING FACTORS RARE INHERITED BLEEDING DISORDERSCongenital Bleeding DisorderGenetics (clinical)Medicine(all)Clotting factorbiologybusiness.industrylcsh:RVitamin K2WarfarinInfant NewbornGeneral MedicineBlood Proteinsmedicine.diseaseBlood Coagulation FactorsRecombinant ProteinschemistryCarbon-Carbon LigasesImmunologybiology.proteinVitamin K Deficiencybusinessmedicine.drugProtein C
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Missense mutations of coagulation factor XII in hereditary angioedema with normal complement C1 inhibitor

2007

biologybusiness.industryImmunologyCoagulation Factor XIImedicine.diseaseComplement (complexity)C1-inhibitorHereditary angioedemaImmunologymedicinebiology.proteinMissense mutationbusinessMolecular BiologyMolecular Immunology
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The Evolution of Hemophilia Care: Clinical and Laboratory Advances, Opportunities, and Challenges

2020

AbstractHemophilia A (HA) and B (HB) are X-linked bleeding disorders caused by mutations in the F8 or F9 gene that result in the absence, or reduced activity, of the corresponding clotting factor. The severity of bleeding and related complications is proportional to the amount of residual circulating functional factor. The development of a safe and effective hemophilia treatment lasted several decades and has been mainly based on clotting factor replacement. Advances in the engineering and manufacturing of clotting concentrates have led to the widespread availability of extended half-life products that reduced the number of intravenous infusions needed to achieve adequate trough levels. The…

medicine.medical_specialtyAcetylgalactosamineInjections SubcutaneousLipoproteinsHemorrhage030204 cardiovascular system & hematologyAntibodies Monoclonal HumanizedHemophilia AHemophilia BSeverity of Illness IndexDisease courseFactor IX03 medical and health sciencesRoute of administrationLife Expectancy0302 clinical medicineAntibodies BispecificmedicineHumansRNA Small InterferingInfusions IntravenousIntensive care medicineFactor IXClotting factorClinical Trials as TopicFactor VIIICoagulantsbusiness.industryGenetic TherapyHematologyIntravenous InfusionsHistory 20th CenturyBlood Coagulation FactorsLaboratoriesbusiness030215 immunologymedicine.drugHämostaseologie
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Combined use of antifibrinolytics and activated prothrombin complex concentrate (aPCC) is not related to thromboembolic events in patients with acqui…

2019

Antifibrinolytics combined with aPCC are not routinely administered to patients with acquired hemophilia A due to increased thrombotic risk. This association normalizes clot stability, and improves the efficacy of therapy, but can increase the risk of severe side effects. Due to these premises it has always raised doubts and perplexities in the clinics. We now report the data of the "FEIBA® on acquired haemophilia A Italian Registry (FAIR Registry)", a retrospective-prospective study that included 56 patients. This is the first study that assessed the clinical response of the combination of aPCC and antifibrinolytic agents in patients with acquired haemophilia A. A total of 101 acute bleeds…

medicine.medical_specialtyAntifibrinolyticmedicine.drug_classHemorrhage030204 cardiovascular system & hematologyHemophilia APremises03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineDrug TherapyThromboembolismAntifibrinolytic agentInternal medicineActivated prothrombin complex concentrateAcquired haemophiliaThromboembolic riskHumansMedicineIn patientRegistries030212 general & internal medicineAcquired haemophilia AHematologybusiness.industryHematologyAcquired haemophilia A; Activated prothrombin complex concentrate; Antifibrinolytics; Thromboembolic risk; Antifibrinolytic Agents; Blood Coagulation Factors; Cardiovascular Diseases; Drug Therapy Combination; Hemophilia A; Hemorrhage; Humans; Registries; ThromboembolismAntifibrinolytic AgentsBlood Coagulation FactorsClinical trialTolerabilityCardiovascular DiseasesCombinationAntifibrinolyticDrug Therapy CombinationAntifibrinolyticsCardiology and Cardiovascular Medicinebusiness
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