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Publication
Journal: Haemostasis
March/5/1995
Abstract
The present paper describes a mathematical model of the kinetics of the extrinsic coagulation cascade in vitro. The coagulation factors FI, FII, FV, FVII, FX, heparin and antithrombin III (ATIII) as well as soluble fibrin polymers are considered. The effect of single-factor deficiencies of the factors II, V, VII and X, diseases like hypo- and dysfibrinogenaemia, hepatic insufficiency, inhibited polymerisation by degradation products, heparin therapy with and without ATIII deficiency and coumarin therapy on prothrombin time can be portrayed. Physiology of coagulation is represented in a dynamic mathematical model as a differential equation system. The model is based on three reaction types: enzymatic cleavage, complex formation and polymerisation. The model was implemented in a continuous simulation program on a personal computer using the Pascal programming language. Unknown rate constants were estimated by chi 2 fit. Prothrombin time calculated by the model was compared to the training set of 20 plasma samples. In most but not all cases the model harmonized quite well with the coagulometric data.
Publication
Journal: Zhong xi yi jie he xue bao = Journal of Chinese integrative medicine
January/4/2005
Abstract
OBJECTIVE
To explore the characteristics of traditional Chinese medical syndrome (TCM syndrome) of hepatocirrhosis.
METHODS
Clinical information from the four diagnosis methods of traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) and related laboratorial indexes were systematically collected from 223 hepatocirrhosis cases, and the multi-statistical methods including systematic cluster analysis, principal component analysis, stepwise discrimination and variance analysis were made with the software SAS 6.11.
RESULTS
Multi-analysis showed that there were 3 categories of syndrome characteristics. Type 1 (134 cases): damp heat, blood stasis, deficiency of liver and spleen Qi; Type 2 (62 cases): deficiency of both Qi and Yin with severe deficiency of Qi, heat with severe dampness, blood stasis; Type 3 (27 cases): deficiency of both Qi and Yin with severe deficiency of Yin, stasis and heat or dampness. Analysis of the changes of the related laboratorial indexes among the three types of syndrome showed that Type 1 mainly manifested asthenia syndrome with sthenia syndrome, and its indexes of AST, ALT, GGT levels were markedly higher than those of Type 2 and Type 3, both of which mainly showed sthenia syndrome with asthenia syndrome, and that Type 3 was in active inflammation, deficiency of both Qi and Yin (deficiency of Yin>> deficiency of Qi), and its FN, Alb, FV, FVII, PLT, PCT levels were obviously reduced.
CONCLUSIONS
The multi-statistical methods can reveal the characteristics and regularity of TCM syndrome of hepatocirrhosis, and the 3 categories of syndrome characteristics basically conform to clinical manifestations. The result of TCM syndrome distribution and laboratorial indexes infer that damp heat is the pathological basis of hepatocirrhosis, and the degree of liver function disorder and liver damage may be the pathological basis of deficiency of Yin of both liver and kidney.
Publication
Journal: Thrombosis and Haemostasis
May/26/1999
Abstract
Increased activation of both blood coagulation and fibrinolysis occurs during normal pregnancy. The responsible mechanisms are unclear, but may include increases in both oestradiol and blood lipids. We, therefore, studied the associations between fasting serum oestradiol, plasma cholesterol and triglyceride, and Factor VII activity, PAI activity, t-PA antigen, fibrin D-dimer, and vWF antigen in 10 women, each sampled on 6 occasions between 10 weeks and 35 weeks during normal pregnancy. Strong and similar individual correlations were observed between increases in FVII, PAI, t-PA and D-dimer (but not vWF) and increases in both oestradiol and triglyceride. Associations between increments in plasma cholesterol and haemostatic factors (except for FVII), were somewhat weaker. We, therefore, suggest that oestradiol-induced hypertriglyceridaemia may be a cause of elevations in plasma Factor VII activity, PAI and t-PA, and fibrin turnover (D-dimer) during normal pregnancy, but is poorly related to the increase in vWF antigen.
Publication
Journal: Thrombosis and Haemostasis
July/27/2005
Abstract
Plasma concentrations of coagulation factorVII (FVII) are determined by environmental and genetic factors. The influence of functional polymorphisms in the FVII gene (-670A>C, -402G>A, -401G>T and R353Q) and of established cardiovascular risk factors on plasma concentrations of FVII were investigated in a representative sample of middle-aged women with (n=238) and without (n=220) coronary heart disease (CHD). Specific and sensitive assays were used to measure FVII antigen (VIIag) and activated factorVII (VIIa). The effect of genotypes was markedly stronger on VIIa than on VIIag, with the percentage variation in FVII levels accounted for by genotypes being greater in controls than in patients. Of the four polymorphisms examined, only the R353Q contributed to the variation inVIIa (24.1% in patients and 30.3% in controls). The -401G>T and -670A>C promoter polymorphisms together accounted for 12.2% of the variation in VIIag amongst patients whereas the -401G>T polymorphism alone contributed 19.7% of the variation in VIIag in controls. Serum triglycerides exerted a major influence onVIIag in both patients (13.0%) and controls (7.2%). Three main haplotypes emerged from the four polymorphisms which accounted for 98% of all haplotypes. Large-scale prospective studies of CHD including FVII haplotypes and sensitive and specific FVII measurements are needed in women.
Publication
Journal: Disease Markers
May/4/2005
Abstract
The interaction between cell-surface tissue factor (TF) and the plasma coagulation factor VII (FVII) initiates the coagulation network that leads to the generation of thrombin and the formation of a fibrin clot. Thrombin also activates cellular protease activated receptors (PARs) through which it activates components of the inflammatory pathway. TF is expressed constitutively by cardiomyocytes and evidence from mice transgenic for a human TF mini-gene that express very low levels of human TF suggests that the TF-FVII interaction is critical for haemostasis within the heart. Pathological contact between TF and FVII may occur in the heart during ischaemia-reperfusion (I-R) injury and this may lead to activation of coagulation and thrombin generation. Evidence from animal models now suggests that thrombin is an important mediator of inflammation in I-R injury. The coagulation pathway therefore represents a novel therapeutic target for intervention in the prevention of I-R injury.
Publication
Journal: Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology
January/21/1998
Abstract
Acute elevation of the coagulant activity of blood coagulation factor VII (FVIIc) is observed after consumption of high-fat meals. This elevation is caused by an increase in the concentration of activated FVII (FVIIa). In a randomized crossover study, we investigated whether saturated, monounsaturated, or polyunsaturated fats differed regarding postprandial activation of FVII. Eighteen healthy young men participated in the study. On 6 separate days each participant consumed two meals (times, 0 and 1 3/4 hours) enriched with 70 g (15 and 55 g) of either rapeseed oil, olive oil, sunflower oil, palm oil, or butter (42% of energy from fat) or isoenergetic low-fat meals (6% of energy from fat). Fasting and series of nonfasting blood samples (the last at time 8 1/2 hours) were collected. Plasma triglycerides, FVIIc, FVIIa, and free fatty acids were analyzed. There were marked effects of the fat quantity on postprandial responses of plasma triglycerides, FVII, and free fatty acids. The high-fat meals caused, in contrast to the low-fat meals, considerable increases in plasma triglycerides. Plasma levels of FVIIc and FVIIa peaks were 7% and 60% higher after consumption of high-fat meals than after consumption of low-fat meals. The five different fat qualities caused similar postprandial increases in plasma triglycerides, FVIIc, and FVIIa. These findings indicate that high-fat meals may be prothrombotic, irrespective of their fatty acid composition. The postprandial FVII activation was not associated with the plasma triglyceride or free fatty acid responses.
Publication
Journal: Thrombosis and Haemostasis
December/1/2010
Abstract
Clearance mechanisms for recombinant activated human FVII (rFVIIa; NovoSeven), a heterogeneously glycosylated protein, have yet to be fully elucidated, but may involve the liver. The effects of the gamma-carboxy glutamic acid (Gla) domain and the sialic acid content of the protein on rFVIIa clearance were investigated following intravenous administration of rFVIIa lacking the Gla domain, des(1-44) rFVIIa and asialo-rFVIIa in pharmacokinetic (PK) studies and perfused rat livers. PK parameters for both rFVIIa and des(1-44) rFVIIa had similar biphasic clearance profiles, as well as half-lives ([t(1/2)]=80 and 88 minutes, respectively), while asialo-rFVIIa was cleared quickly (t(1/2)=21 minutes) with a linear clearance profile. Perfused liver studies with all proteins (10 nM) mirrored the trends in profiles observed in the PK study. rFVIIa and des(1-44) rFVIIa were cleared to a similar extent, 41% and 35%, respectively, after 1 h, whereas plasma-derived FVII from humans (which has a higher sialylation content than rFVIIa) was cleared to a lesser extent (21%). Asialo-rFVIIa, on the other hand, was almost totally cleared and when an excess of asialo-orosomucoid was added to the perfusate, its clearance was significantly reduced (by 34%) and also for rFVIIa, albeit to a lesser extent (by 14%). Together these data suggest that carbohydrate receptor(s) (e.g. the asialoglycoprotein receptor, ASGPR) play a role in asialo-rFVIIa and rFVIIa clearance. In vivo and liver clearance data correlated well showing similar trends and indicated that rFVIIa clearance is not affected by the Gla domain, but rather by a subpopulation of N-glycosylated structures on rFVIIa.
Publication
Journal: Arteriosclerosis and thrombosis : a journal of vascular biology
March/16/1994
Abstract
Factor VII (FVII) plays an important role in initiation of the tissue factor-induced coagulation pathway. An increase in FVII coagulant activity (FVIIc) has been proposed as an independent risk factor for coronary artery disease. However, it remains uncertain whether high FVIIc levels are due to an increase in the activation of FVII or an increase in the concentration of FVII mass. We developed a new fluorogenic assay for plasma activated FVII (FVIIa) that used soluble tissue factor. The sensitivity of this assay ranged from 0.2 to 1000 ng FVIIa per milliliter of plasma. Plasma FVIIa levels were measured in 110 healthy subjects and 93 patients with hypertension, diabetes mellitus, and/or cardiovascular disease. The mean plasma FVIIa level in healthy Japanese individuals was 2.5 ng/mL, which was lower than that in Western subjects. Gel filtration analysis showed that most of the circulating FVIIa was in a free form, and binding of FVIIa to tissue factor in plasma was not detected. Aging increased both the FVIIa level and FVII mass, whereas menopause increased mainly the FVII mass. Elderly patients with arterial cardiovascular diseases showed increases in plasma FVIIa levels and FVIIa to FVII antigen (FVII:Ag) ratios. Among the elderly, arterial cardiovascular disease was more common in a high-FVIIa than a low-FVIIa group. Plasma FVIIa levels were not correlated with serum levels of total cholesterol or triglycerides. The FVIIa level and the FVIIa-to-FVII:Ag ratio were positively correlated with fibrinogen level and negatively correlated with body mass index and serum albumin level in the elderly. In conclusion, aging, cardiovascular disease, and malnutrition increased plasma FVIIa levels. FVIIa levels were not correlated with lipid levels or hepatic synthesis, suggesting that FVIIa may be an independent risk factor for cardiovascular disease.
Publication
Journal: Atherosclerosis
June/27/2005
Abstract
Studies of the effects of dietary fatty acids on the haemostatic system, and their potential relevance for the thrombotic component of coronary heart disease (CHD), have a pedigree as long as those linking dietary fat, plasma lipoprotein metabolism and atheroma. Achievements have not been as impressive, however, partly owing to the relatively slow evolution of our understanding of the complicated physiology, biochemistry and pathology of haemostasis and fibrinolysis, which remains incomplete. Progress was also retarded up to 1980 by a general reluctance to acknowledge the pathogenic importance of thrombosis for myocardial infarction. Interest in dietary fat and the haemostatic mechanism re-emerged with reports of associations of haemostatic variables with plasma triacylglycerol levels and risk of CHD. This review summarises the history, focuses on evidence for dietary C18-unsaturated fatty acids as important determinants of factor VII (FVII) activation and plasminogen activator inhibitor type 1 (PAI-1) levels, and discusses possible underlying mechanisms involving ATP binding cassette (ABC) transporters and peroxisome proliferator-activated receptors. The potential relevance of these effects for CHD is discussed. In the presence of unstable atheromatous plaques, increased levels of activated FVII and PAI-1 induced by diets rich in mixtures of saturated and unsaturated fats may raise the risk of occlusive thrombosis in the event of plaque rupture.
Publication
Journal: PLoS ONE
May/5/2016
Abstract
Periostin (PN, gene name POSTN) is an extracellular matrix protein that is up-regulated in bronchial epithelial cells and lung fibroblasts by TH-2 cytokines. Its paralog, TGF-β-induced protein (βig-h3, gene name TGFBI), is also expressed in the lung and up-regulated in bronchial myofibroblasts by TGF-β. PN and βig-h3 contain fasciclin 1 modules that harbor putative recognition sequences for γ-glutamyl carboxylase and are annotated in UniProt as undergoing vitamin K-dependent γ-carboxylation of multiple glutamic acid residues. γ-carboxylation profoundly alters activities of other proteins subject to the modification, e.g., blood coagulation factors, and would be expected to alter the structure and function of PN and βig-h3. To analyze for the presence of γ-carboxylation, proteins extracted from fibrotic lung were reacted with monoclonal antibodies specific for PN, βig-h3, or modification with γ-carboxyglutamic acid (Gla). In Western blots of 1-dimensional gels, bands stained with anti-PN or -βig-h3 did not match those stained with anti-Gla. In 2-dimensional gels, anti-PN-positive spots had pIs of 7.0 to >8, as expected for the unmodified protein, and there was no overlap between anti-PN-positive and anti-Gla-positive spots. Recombinant PN and blood coagulation factor VII were produced in HEK293 cells that had been transfected with vitamin K 2, 3-epoxide reductase C1 to optimize γ-carboxylation. Recombinant PN secreted from these cells did not react with anti-Gla antibody and had pIs similar to that found in extracts of fibrotic lung whereas secreted factor VII reacted strongly with anti-Gla antibody. Over 67% coverage of recombinant PN was achieved by mass spectrometry, including peptides with 19 of the 24 glutamates considered targets of γ-carboxylation, but analysis revealed no modification. Over 86% sequence coverage and three modified glutamic acid residues were identified in recombinant fVII. These data indicate that PN and βig-h3 are not subject to vitamin K-dependent γ-carboxylation.
Publication
Journal: Frontiers in Veterinary Science
December/6/2018
Abstract
Background: Hemorrhagic shock and volume replacement can alter coagulation. Synthetic colloids, hydroxyethyl starch (HES), and gelatin, may enhance hypocoagulability. Our primary objective was to describe the effect of four fluid products on coagulation in canine hemorrhagic shock. Our secondary objective was to compare measurements of coagulation during shock to baseline in all dogs. Methods: Anesthetized greyhounds subjected to atraumatic hemorrhage for 60 min were administered 20 mL kg-1 of either fresh whole blood (FWB), 6% HES 130/0.4, 4% succinylated gelatin (GELO), or 80 mL kg-1 of isotonic crystalloid over 20 min (n = 6 per group). Platelet closure time (PCT), rotational thromboelastometry (ROTEM) and plasma coagulation assays were measured at baseline, end of hemorrhage (shock), and 40 (T60), and 160 (T180) min after study fluid. ROTEM parameters included clotting time (CT), clot formation time (CFT), alpha angle, maximum clot firmness (MCF), lysis index at 60 min (LI60), and thrombodynamic potential index (TPI) for INTEM, EXTEM, FIBTEM (MCF only), and APTEM (LI60 only) profiles. Plasma coagulation assays included prothrombin time (PT), activated partial thromboplastin time (APTT), fibrinogen concentration and activities of factor VII (FVII), factor VIII (FVIII), and von Willebrand Factor antigen (vWF). Between-group differences were tested using linear mixed models with post-hoc between-group comparisons (Bonferroni-Holm corrected). Differences between baseline and shock were tested using paired t-tests. Significance was set at P < 0.05. Results: GELO showed longer PCT at T60, compared with FWB and CRYST, and at T180, compared with all other groups. HES showed longer EXTEM CT at T60, compared with all other groups. HES showed lower INTEM and EXTEM MCF at T60 and lower INTEM MCF at T180, compared with FWB. Some plasma coagulation assays showed greater hypocoagulability with HES. Comparing shock to baseline, EXTEM CT, INTEM CFT, EXTEM CFT, PT, and FVIII significantly increased and PCT, INTEM CT, INTEM MCF, EXTEM MCF, EXTEM LI60, EXTEM TPI, FIBTEM MCF, APTT, fibrinogen, FVII, and vWF significantly decreased. Conclusions: In dogs with hemorrhagic shock, volume replacement with GELO caused mild platelet dysfunction and HES was associated with coagulation changes consistent with hypocoagulability, beyond effects of hemodilution. Shock alone produced some evidence of hypocoagulability.
Publication
Journal: Blood
January/11/2015
Abstract
Successful competition of activated factor VII (FVIIa) with zymogen factor VII (FVII) for tissue factor (TF) and loading of the platelet surface with FVIIa are plausible driving forces behind the pharmacological effect of recombinant FVIIa (rFVIIa) in hemophilia patients. Thrombin generation measurements in platelet-rich hemophilia A plasma revealed competition for TF, which potentially could reduce the effective (r)FVIIa:TF complex concentration and thereby attenuate factor Xa production. However, (auto)activation of FVII apparently counteracted the negative effect of zymogen binding; a small impact was observed at endogenous concentrations of FVII and FVIIa but was virtually absent at pharmacological amounts of rFVIIa. Moreover, corrections of the propagation phase in hemophilia A required rFVIIa concentrations above the range where a physiological level of FVII was capable to downregulate thrombin generation. These data strongly suggest that rFVIIa acts independently of TF in hemophilia therapy and that FVII displacement by rFVIIa is a negligible mechanistic component.
Publication
Journal: Biochimie
October/13/2009
Abstract
In this study the bioactivity of three differently glycosylated blood coagulation factor VII (FVII) variants (human plasma FVII, recombinant human FVII produced in CHO and BHK cell cultures) were analyzed and compared. Surface plasmon resonance studies of FVII interaction with soluble and full length TF together with FVII autoactivation assays revealed that BHK-derived FVII has the highest bioactivity, while human plasma and CHO-derived FVII showed very similar bioactivity. The affinity of FVII variants to TF correlates with FVII autoactivation rates--the higher the affinity, the faster the autoactivation rate.
Publication
Journal: Clinical and laboratory haematology
December/16/1998
Abstract
A number of workers have examined protein C in relation to other vitamin K dependent factors during warfarin therapy and successfully identified protein C deficient patients by ratio calculation. However, protein S deficiency has not been addressed in this manner. This study compares protein C and protein S by functional and antigenic determination with procoagulant factors of similar half life (Factors VII and II) in an attempt to identify protein C and protein S deficient patients whilst on oral anticoagulant therapy. Procoagulant and anticoagulant factors were compared by linear regression in a population of normal blood donors and patients on stabilized warfarin therapy to obtain expected values for protein C and protein S dependent upon FVII and FII levels, respectively. Observed over expected values for protein C and protein S were calculated for individual patients and normal ranges derived. Comparison of similarly calculated observed over expected protein C and protein S ratios with these normal ranges successfully identified known protein C and protein S deficient patients who were taking warfarin at time of testing.
Publication
Journal: British Journal of Haematology
December/6/2001
Abstract
The enhanced extrinsic coagulation in response to inflammation could contribute to disseminated intravascular coagulation, often manifesting cardiovascular complications. The complex mechanism remains unclear and effective management is not well established. The ability of protamine to offset bacterial endotoxin (LPS)-induced tissue factor (TF)-initiated extrinsic coagulation was demonstrated in human peripheral blood monocytes and cultured human leukaemia THP-1 monocytes, which was consistent with the inhibition of rabbit brain thromboplastin (rbTF) procoagulant activity in a cell-free in vitro model. Protamine significantly prolonged prothrombin time, further confirming the downregulation of the extrinsic pathway. However, thrombin time remained unaltered. Chromogenic assays were performed to dissect the extrinsic pathway, identifying inhibitory site(s). Protamine significantly inhibited factor VII (FVII) activation but not the dissected FX activation. The amidolytic activities of FVIIa and FXa were unaffected. The inhibited FVII activation in the presence of protamine was confirmed by the diminished FVIIa formation on Western blot analyses. Protamine preferentially inhibited TF-catalysed FVII activation, downregulating the extrinsic cascade. Protamine could be of anticoagulant significance in the management of the extrinsic hypercoagulation.
Publication
Journal: British Journal of Haematology
August/15/2001
Abstract
To investigate gender differences in conventional, coagulation and fibrinolytic factors in South Asian ischaemic stroke patients, we compared these variables in 50 South Asian females (SAFP) with 90 South Asian males (SAMP) with ischaemic stroke and in 52 females (SAFC) and 38 males (SAMC) without stroke. Plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (PAI-1) antigen levels were significantly higher in SAFP compared with SAMP (18.2 vs. 13.3 U/ml, P = 0.04) even after adjustment for known covariates, but there was no difference in PAI-1 antigen levels between males and females in the control group. South Asian females exhibited higher levels of factor VII antigen and FVII:C activity in both stroke patients (114 vs. 99% in males, P = 0.01; 116 versus 104% in males, P = 0.04) and controls (116 vs. 97% in males, P = 0.004; 115 vs. 93% in males, P = 0.01). There were no significant differences in the levels of fibrinogen (3.8 vs. 3.7 g/l), FXIIa (2.2 vs. 2.4 ng/ml), von Willebrand factor (1.8 vs. 1.9 IU/ml) and tissue plasminogen activator (11.4 vs. 12.0 ng/ml) in SAMP and SAFP respectively. These results suggest that South Asian females have increased FVII levels and that females with a history of ischaemic stroke have a decreased fibrinolytic potential in comparison with males.
Publication
Journal: Thrombosis Research
August/8/2013
Abstract
BACKGROUND
Factor VII activating protease (FSAP) is a plasma protease with FVII and pro-urokinase (pro-uPA) activating properties. A single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) (Marburg I, MI) in the FSAP gene (HABP-2) leads to a low activity of the MI-FSAP towards pro-uPA, but supposedly not towards FVII and is described as a risk factor for athero-thrombosis and liver fibrosis. Recently we found, however, that FVII is an extremely poor substrate of FSAP and identified tissue factor pathway inhibitor (TFPI) as a novel substrate for FSAP. This prompted us to re-investigate the proteolytic activity profile of FSAP and to re-define its role in haemostasis.
METHODS
Using purified protein and genotyped plasma samples, we systematically compared the activities of wild type (WT) and MI-FSAP towards natural plasma substrates. The influence of FSAP on coagulation was studied in prothrombin time assays.
RESULTS
FSAP from homozygous MI-carriers has a general low proteolytic activity making this variant a natural "knock-down". In human plasma WT-FSAP, but not MI-FSAP, accelerated the extrinsic coagulation by inactivation of TFPI. The diminished ability of MI-FSAP to cleave TFPI is reflected by a positive correlation between the FSAP enzymatic activity and cleaved TFPI in the circulation.
CONCLUSIONS
Most likely TFPI cleavage by WT-FSAP occurs in vivo and contributes to an elevated level of endogenous FVIIa. This may explain why MI-FSAP is not a clear indicator for deep vein thrombosis in population studies. The loss of the pro-fibrinolytic protective function of FSAP in carriers of the MI-SNP may account for the association of the MI-SNP with atherosclerosis and thromboembolic complications.
Publication
Journal: Vascular Pharmacology
August/6/2015
Abstract
This review summarizes available evidence on the beneficial effects of inorganic nitrates and the monounsaturated fatty acid (MUFA) oleic acid, largely contained in Mediterranean diet, on blood pressure and coagulation activity. Inorganic nitrate. Normal vascular function requires NO production from the 1-arginine-NO synthase (NOS) pathway. This process is defective in conditions of local hypoxia, and here nitrite can substitute for 1-arginine-NOS derived NO. In this context, NO generation from the nitrate-nitrite-NO pathway mostly derived from green leafy vegetables appears to be an alternative source for NOS-dependent NO production, ensuring NO bioavailability also in situations when the endogenous 1-arginine/NO synthase pathway is dysfunctional or physiologically reduced in local hypoxic conditions. Olive oil and oleic acid. In addition to effects on lipoprotein metabolism and oxidation, the beneficial effects of oleic acid occur also on coagulation activity, namely on coagulation factor VII (FVII). Normally, a substantial increase of FVII coagulant activity (FVIIc) occurs within 2-3h after a fatty meal and persists for several hours thereafter. When a background diet high in MUFA is consumed, a lower post-prandial increase of FVIIc takes place.
Publication
Journal: Haemophilia
December/4/2000
Abstract
Recombinant activated factor VII (rFVIIa) can be used as an alternative therapy in patients with FVII deficiency. However, as the drug has a very short half-life, continuous infusion could be a meaningful administration modality. We report the case of a 30-year-old woman with moderate FVII deficiency and human immunodeficiency virus infection who underwent a caesarean section delivery. She was treated with a continuous infusion of rFVIIa and did not suffer any bleeding complication. The continuous infusion of rFVIIa was a safe and effective therapeutic approach for our patient, maintaining her levels of FVII:C and avoiding bleeding during caesarean section and afterwards.
Publication
Journal: Anticancer Research
February/12/2017
Abstract
The aim of the present study was to investigate the efficacy of the traditional Chinese medicine (TCM), astragaloside IV (AS-IV) and curcumin on tumor growth and angiogenesis in an orthotopic nude-mouse model of human hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). We have previously shown the usefulness of orthotopic models of human cancer for evaluation of the efficacy of TCM.
Nude mice with orthotopic HepG2 HCC were treated with vehicle control (0.01 ml/g normal saline), cisplatinum (2 mg/kg), AS-IV (20 mg/kg), curcumin (100 mg/kg) or AS-IV plus curcumin (20 mg/kg + 100 mg/kg). Tumor inhibition in each group was evaluated by tumor weight at autopsy. The effect of AS-IV and curcumin on tumor angiogenesis was assessed by CD34 staining and expression of fibroblast growth factor-2 (FGF2), matrix metalloproteinase 2 (MMP2), vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), hepatocyte growth factor (HGF), thrombosis-related factor tissue factor (TF) and coagulation factor VII (FVII), as well as microRNAs miR-122 and miR-221.
AS-IV and curcumin alone and in combination significantly reduced mean tumor weight compared to vehicle control (p<0.05). Tumor microvessel count was reduced by AS-IV and curcumin alone. Expression of FGF2, MMP2, VEGF, HGF, TF and FVII was reduced by AS-IV and curcumin alone. AS-IV and curcumin alone up-regulated expression of miR-122 and down-regulated that of miR-221. The combination of AS-IV and curcumin demonstrated significant synergistic effects on microvessel count as well as on expression of angiogenic and thrombosis-related factors and microRNAs.
The present study indicates future clinical potential of combination therapy with AS-IV and curcumin for HCC.
Publication
Journal: Lipids
March/19/2006
Abstract
Stearic acid has been claimed to be prothrombotic. Elevated plasma factor VII coagulant activity (FVIIc) may raise the risk of coronary thrombosis in the event of plaque rupture. Fibrinogen, an acute-phase protein, is necessary for normal blood clotting; however, elevated levels of fibrinogen increase the risk of coronary heart disease (CHD). Here I report the results of three controlled, human dietary intervention studies, which used a randomized crossover design to investigate the hemostatic effects of stearic acid-rich test diets in healthy young men. A diet high in stearic acid (shea butter) resulted in a 13% lower fasting plasma FVIIc than a high palmitic acid diet, and was 18% lower than a diet high in myristic and lauric acids (P = 0.001) after 3 wk of intervention. The stearic acid-rich test fat increased plasma fibrinogen concentrations slightly compared with the myristic-lauric acid diet (P < 0.01). When investigating the acute effects of fatty meals, those high in stearic acid (synthesized test fat) resulted in a smaller postprandial increase in FVII than those high in trans and oleic FA, indicating a smaller increase in activated FVII after ingesting stearic acid compared with fats high in monounsaturated FA, probably caused by lower postprandial lipemia. Thus, the present investigations did not find dietary stearic acid to be more thrombogenic, in either fasting effects compared with other long-chain FA, or in acute effects compared with dietary unsaturated FA, including trans monounsaturated FA. The slightly increased effect on fasting plasma fibrinogen may be biologically insignificant, but it should be investigated further.
Publication
Journal: Journal of Thrombosis and Haemostasis
June/29/2005
Abstract
The concept of the 'French paradox' has been recently challenged. As it is difficult in a short period to produce direct clinical evidence of the protective effect of red wine on thrombosis, we evaluated such a possibility in an experimental model mimicking the conditions of the 'French paradox'. Normolipidemic rats (FNL) were fed a standard diet or a 2% cholesterol-rich-diet (Ch-rich-diet) for 5 months: the latter was given either alone (FNL + D) or in combination with 'alcohol-free' red wine (FNL + D + 5 W). Arterial thrombosis was measured as the occlusion time (OT) of an artificial prosthesis inserted into the abdominal aorta. Lipid levels, platelet adhesion to fibrillar collagen, factor VII (FVII) clotting activity and fibrinogen levels were also measured. Compared to animals fed a standard diet, Ch-rich diet induced in FNL rats a several-fold increase in lipids and FVII levels with a concomitant significant increase in both thrombotic tendency (shortening of the OT) and platelet adhesion. 'Alcohol-free' red wine supplementation almost completely reverted the prothrombotic effect of the Ch-rich-diet. Indeed, the OT was prolonged from 78 +/- 3 to 122 +/- 10 h (P < 0.01), while platelet adhesion to fibrillar collagen was reduced from 49 +/- 3.5% to 30 +/- 2.8%. Neither the increase in lipid levels induced by Ch-rich diet nor FVII or fibrinogen levels were modified by wine supplementation. In conclusion, in experimental animals, this study supports the concept of the 'French paradox' that regular consumption of wine (rather than alcohol) was able to prevent arterial thrombosis associated with dietary-induced hypercholesterolemia, an effect mediated by downregulation of platelet function.
Publication
Journal: Clinical and Applied Thrombosis/Hemostasis
July/7/2013
Abstract
Fourteen patients with congenital factor VII (FVII) deficiency were reported to have had pulmonary embolism. All patients were type 2 defects with variably low activity but normal or near-normal antigen. Concomitant deep vein thrombosis was present in 7 instances. The majority of patients had no or only a mild bleeding tendency. Associated prothrombotic risk factors were present in 11 patients (old age, surgery, substitution therapy with prothrombin complex, plasma-derived or activated FVII concentrates). Pulmonary embolism was usually moderate or severe. In 2 cases, it was fatal. Only 4 patients were studied by means of molecular biology techniques. The Arg304Gln mutation was found in 5 of the 8 alleles. Heparin and Coumadin together with adequate substitution therapy were carried out in 5 patients with satisfactory results. The FVII deficiency does not grant a sure protection from venous thromboembolism.
Publication
Journal: Blood Reviews
February/10/2016
Abstract
Recombinant activated factor VII (rFVIIa) was initially developed to treat bleeding episodes in patients with congenital haemophilia and inhibitors. The story of its development began in the 1970s, when FVIIa was identified as one of the activated coagulation factors that has minimal potential for inducing thromboembolic side-effects. Extensive research over the last 30 years has greatly increased our knowledge of the characteristics of FVII, its activation, and the mechanisms by which rFVIIa restores haemostasis. In haemophilia, the haemostatic effect of rFVIIa is mediated via binding to thrombin-activated platelets at the site of injury, thereby enhancing thrombin generation also in the absence of factor (F) VIII or FIX. The mechanism of action of rFVIIa has also allowed its successful use in other clinical scenarios characterised by impaired thrombin generation, and its licensed uses have now been extended to acquired haemophilia, congenital FVII deficiency and Glanzmann's thrombasthenia.
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