AI Article Synopsis

  • - Vitamin K-dependent clotting factors are now recognized as playing dual roles in both promoting and preventing blood clots, challenging previous classifications of these factors as purely hemorrhagic or thrombotic disorders.
  • - Recent discoveries, particularly mutations within factors IX and VII, have shown that certain genetic defects can lead to an increased risk of venous thrombosis rather than bleeding, indicating a complex interaction in coagulation.
  • - Advances in molecular biology have expanded our understanding of blood coagulation, revealing that defects in proteins like prothrombin can cause clotting issues even in the absence of bleeding tendencies.

Article Abstract

Vitamin K-dependent clotting factors are commonly divided into prohemorrhagic (FII, FVII, FIX, and FX) and antithrombotic (protein C and protein S). Furthermore, another protein (protein Z) does not seem strictly correlated with blood clotting. As a consequence of this assumption, vitamin K-dependent defects were considered as hemorrhagic or thrombotic disorders. Recent clinical observations, and especially, recent advances in molecular biology investigations, have demonstrated that this was incorrect. In 2009, it was demonstrated that the mutation Arg338Leu in exon 8 of FIX was associated with the appearance of a thrombophilic state and venous thrombosis. The defect was characterized by a 10-fold increased activity in FIX activity, while FIX antigen was only slightly increased (FIX Padua). On the other hand, it was noted on clinical grounds that the thrombosis, mainly venous, was present in about 2% to 3% of patients with FVII deficiency. It was subsequently demonstrated that 2 mutations in FVII, namely, Arg304Gln and Ala294Val, were particularly affected. Both these mutations are type 2 defects, namely, they show low activity but normal or near-normal FVII antigen. More recently, in 2011-2012, it was noted that prothrombin defects due to mutations of Arg596 to Leu, Gln, or Trp in exon 15 cause the appearance of a dysprothrombinemia that shows no bleeding tendency but instead a prothrombotic state with venous thrombosis. On the contrary, no abnormality of protein C or protein S has been shown to be associated with bleeding rather than with thrombosis. These studies have considerably widened the spectrum and significance of blood coagulation studies.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6714837PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1076029618811109DOI Listing

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