Background: Resistance to activated protein C (APC) is the most frequent cause of inherited thrombophilia. This phenomenon has been reported in 10-50% of selected patients with venous thromboembolism, a variation that might result from different degrees of selection in different reports.
Methods: We measured the APC sensitivity ratio in 494 frozen blood samples from unselected consecutive outpatients suspected of pulmonary embolism and referred over a 30-month period to the emergency ward of the University Hospital of Geneva, the only public primary-tertiary care hospital in the region of Geneva (400,000 inhabitants).
D-dimer (DD), when measured by a quantitative enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), is a valuable test to exclude venous thromboembolism (VTE). However, DD ELISA technique is not appropriate for emergency use and the available agglutination latex assays are not sensitive enough to be used as an alternative to rule out the diagnosis of VTE. Latex assays could still be used as screening tests.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBlood Coagul Fibrinolysis
August 1993
The effects of Amanita phalloides poisoning on haemostatic parameters were determined in five members of two families with particular attention to coagulation inhibitors. According to the prothrombin time and factor V level, one patient had severe poisoning, one moderate and the other three had only mild toxicity. The decrease of inhibitors (antithrombin III, proteins C and protein S) was not followed by coagulation activation as assessed by the moderate increase in D-dimers and the absence of a clinically significant coagulopathy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA 43-year-old man presented a pulmonary embolism. The unusual circumstances of apparition, the age and the increased heparin requirements suggested an antithrombin III (AT III) deficiency. AT III activity was low in the propositus and seven other members of his family (mean 55%), but immunologic levels were normal (mean 110%).
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