Choroidal detachment (CD) is a rare and potentially vision-threatening complication of glaucoma surgery. Inflammation and prolonged ocular hypotony can promote fluid accumulation between the choroid and sclera. Risk factors include trauma, advanced age, use of anticoagulant medications, systemic hypertension, atherosclerosis, and diabetes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Targeted real-time imaging during robot-assisted radical prostatectomy provides information on the localisation and extent of prostate cancer. We assessed the safety and feasibility of the prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA)-targeted fluorescent tracer OTL78 in patients with prostate cancer.
Methods: In this single-arm, phase 2a, feasibility trial with an adaptive design was carried out in The Netherlands Cancer Institute, Netherlands.
Flexible high-definition white-light endoscopy is the current gold standard in screening for cancer and its precursor lesions in the gastrointestinal tract. However, miss rates are high, especially in populations at high risk for developing gastrointestinal cancer (e.g.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Despite recent advances in the multimodal treatment of pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC), overall survival remains poor with a 5-year cumulative survival of approximately 10%. Neoadjuvant (chemo- and/or radio-) therapy is increasingly incorporated in treatment strategies for patients with (borderline) resectable and locally advanced disease. Neoadjuvant therapy aims to improve radical resection rates by reducing tumor mass and (partial) encasement of important vascular structures, as well as eradicating occult micrometastases.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground And Aims: Long-term outcomes of early combined immunosuppression [top-down] compared to conventional management [step-up] in recently diagnosed Crohn's disease [CD] are unknown. We aimed to investigate long-term outcomes of participants of the Step-up/Top-down-trial.
Methods: Trial participants' medical records were reviewed retrospectively.
Objective: Lefradafiban is the orally active prodrug of fradafiban, a glycoprotein IIb/IIIa receptor antagonist. The present phase II study aimed to determine the dose of lefradafiban that provides 80% blockade of the glycoprotein IIb/IIIa receptors by fradafiban, and to study the pharmacodynamics and safety of different doses in patients with stable angina undergoing angioplasty.
Design: A double blind, placebo controlled, dose finding study.
Congenital factor XIII (FXIII) deficiency is a rare autosomal recessive disorder, usually attributed to a defect in the FXIII A subunit, whose genetic basis has been studied in a number of cases. We describe here the genetic variations found in two unrelated patients with FXIII deficiency. Both patients, under prophylactic substitution with FXIII concentrate, showed low plasma FXIII A subunit antigen levels with undetectable A subunit antigen in the platelets and normal plasma B antigen levels, which indicate that the defects are present in the A subunit of the molecule.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAims: Thrombin plays a key role in the clinical syndrome of unstable angina. We investigated the safety and efficacy of five dose levels of efegatran sulphate, a direct thrombin inhibitor, compared to heparin in patients with unstable angina.
Methods: Four hundred and thirty-two patients with unstable angina were enrolled.
Thromb Haemost
September 1998
The molecular basis of hereditary antithrombin (AT) deficiency has been investigated in ten Belgian and three Dutch unrelated kindreds. Eleven of these families had a quantitative or type I AT deficiency, with a history of major venous thromboembolic events in different affected members. In the other two families a qualitative or type II AT deficiency was occasionally diagnosed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Angioscopy surpasses other diagnostic tools, such as angiography and intravascular ultrasound, in detecting arterial thrombus. This capability arises in part from the unique ability of angioscopy to assess true color during imaging. In practice, hardware-induced chromatic distortions and the subjectivity of human color perception substantially limit the theoretic potential of angioscopic color.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe platelet membrane glycoprotein (GP) Ib-IX-V complex, the major von Willebrand factor receptor on platelets, is absent or dysfunctional in patients with the Bernard-Soulier syndrome (BSS). The four single subunits of the GPIb-IX-V complex (GPIb alpha, Ib beta, IX and V) are molecular products of different genes. Several point mutations and deletions affecting the GPIb alpha gene have been identified as the cause of BSS, whilst in four BSS families a GPIX gene defect has been reported.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHeparin-induced thrombocytopenia and/or thrombosis (HITT) are serious complications of heparin treatment. The incidence, as previously reported, varies widely and, in consequence, is not precisely known. Moreover, most reports only concern clinically defined heparin-induced thrombocytopenia.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe currently used activated Protein C resistance test demonstrated to be of limited diagnostic value for the detection of the mutant Factor V Leiden. Moreover, this assay is not useful for patients under anticoagulant therapy. A modification of the APC resistance test, applying Factor V deficient plasma is described which demonstrates a specificity and sensitivity of 1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe pharmacokinetics and tolerability of factor XIII (FXIII) from plasma were compared with those of FXIII from placenta in a randomised, double-blind, crossover study involving 13 patients with congenital FXIII deficiency. Both FXIII activity and FXIII antigen were monitored. No difference was seen in the mean half-lives of the two preparations (9.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHeparin-induced thrombocytopenia (HIT) is a severe complication of heparin therapy. Life-threatening thromboembolism (HITT) may occur in a large number of patients with HIT. In this article diagnostic problems and the clinical course of 4 typical patients are described.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPatients with acquired von Willebrand disease may present with severe bleeding, which is usually difficult to manage. Adequate haemostasis in acquired von Willebrand disease may be achieved with the infusion of factor VIII/von Willebrand factor concentrates or with the administration of desmopressin. We report a case of acquired von Willebrand disease with severe postoperative bleeding, responding poorly to classical von Willebrand factor replacement therapy but successfully treated with high-dose intravenous gammaglobulins.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe case of a 20 year old woman is reported with Budd-Chiari syndrome in whom lupus anticoagulant and anticardiolipin antibodies were shown; treatment with oral anticoagulants induced a considerable improvement. This treatment was interrupted after one year; interruption was followed by redevelopment of ascites. Further treatment with anticoagulants was continued for five years with noticeable improvement.
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