11 resultat
We recently described a new case of alpha 1-antithrombin (alpha 1-AT) Pittsburgh, a mutation that transforms alpha 1-AT into a potent inhibitor of thrombin. In contrast to the originally described patient, who had a severe hemorrhagic diathesis, our proband had only a mild bleeding tendency. The
The association of a variant of antithrombin III (AT III Bligny) and protein C deficiency is described in a 36-year-old patient having suffered from severe thrombotic episodes. His mother has protein C deficiency and showed a single episode of thrombophlebitis following surgery. His father, sister
We investigated a 56-year-old Japanese man with protein C deficiency, who was referred to our hospital because of venous sinus thrombosis and pulmonary thromboembolism. Protein C (PC) activity and the corresponding antigen level in plasma were 66% and 106% of the normal values, respectively. Both
This report describes five families with symptomatic hereditary protein C deficiency. Using a polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-based method, the entire coding sequence and intron-exon boundaries of the protein C gene was amplified from genomic DNA. In each family a single point mutation in the
We have applied single-strand conformation polymorphism (SSCP) to the analysis of exon 7 of the anticoagulant protein C (PC) gene, in 13 PC-deficient Spanish families. Abnormal patterns were visualized in three samples from type I or quantitative PC deficient proposita. A previously undescribed
We report the results of protein C gene (PROC) analysis in a Spanish family with hereditary PC deficiency characterized by the presence of three siblings with PC anticoagulant activity levels clearly below 50% of normal and PC antigen and amidolytic activities between 50 and 75% of normal. Their
A patient with recurrent deep vein thrombosis and heterozygous type II deficiency, characterized by reduced protein C activity in both amidolytic and clotting functional assays, was investigated by direct sequencing of PCR fragments derived from the coding portion of the protein C gene. AG (8856) to
The structure of the gene for protein C, an anticoagulant serine protease, was analyzed in 29 unrelated patients with hereditary thrombophilia and protein C deficiency. Gene deletion(s) or gross rearrangement(s) was not demonstrable by Southern blot hybridization to cDNA probes. However, two
We describe five families presenting with type II hereditary protein C deficiency characterized by normal antigen and amidolytic activity levels but low anticoagulant activity. All the exons and intron/exon junctions of the protein C gene were studied using a strategy combining amplification by the
Familial deficiency of protein C is associated with inherited thrombophilia. To explore how specific missense mutations might cause observed clinical phenotypes, know protein C missense mutations were mapped onto three-dimensional homology models of the protein C protease domain, and the
Dear Editor, Thrombophilia is the tendency to form blood clots both in arteries and veins [1]. Inherited and acquired high plasma homocysteine (HHcy) levels are judged as thrombophilic agents because can induce both arterial and venous thrombosis [2-5]. But, the association of hHHcy with Venous