| Literature DB >> 17656328 |
Charles J Glueck1, Jitender Munjal, Dawit Aregawi, Maliha Agloria, Magdalena Winiarska, Qasim Khalil, Ping Wang.
Abstract
Thrombophilia-hypofibrinolysis may play an important role in rare premature (< or = age 45 years) arterial occlusive events in atherothrombotic cardiovascular (ATCVD) disease, particularly in normolipidemic patients. Whether thrombophilia-hypofibrinolysis contributed to ATCVD < or = age 45 years was assessed in 78 men and 40 women with 230 ATCVD events (myocardial infarction (MI) [n = 60], coronary artery bypass graft [CABG, n = 33], angioplasty [n = 52], chronic angina [n = 41], ischemic stroke [n = 11], transient ischemic attack [TIA, n = 24], claudication [n = 9]). Cases were compared with healthy normal adult controls (44 men and 76 women). In men, the Factor V Leiden mutation was present in 6/63 (10%) cases versus 0/44 (0%) controls (P = 0.042), Factor VIII was high (>150%) in 16/60 (27%) cases versus 1/42 (2%) controls (P = 0.001), Factor XI was high (>150%) in 9/57 (16%) cases versus 0/42 (0%) controls (P = 0.009), and plasminogen activator inhibitor activity (PAI-Fx) was high (>21.1 U/mL) in 15/63 (24%) cases versus 3/43 (7%) controls (P = 0.023). In women, protein C was low (<73%) in 4/26 (15%) cases versus 0/74 (0%) controls (P = 0.004), and free protein S was low (<66%) in 5/27 (19%) cases versus 2/74 (3%) controls (P = 0.014). In women, Factor XI was high (>150%) in 3/27 (11%) cases versus 1/74 (1%) controls (P = 0.057), and the lupus anticoagulant was present in 9/32 (28%) cases versus 2/51 (4%) controls (P = 0.002). In patients with ATCVD < or = age 45 years, thrombophilias (Factor V Leiden, Factor VIII, Factor XI, protein C and S deficiency, lupus anticoagulant) and hypofibrinolysis (PAI-Fx, Lp[a]) may promote arterial thrombosis, which is synergistic with atherosclerotic endothelial injury.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2007 PMID: 17656328 DOI: 10.1016/j.trsl.2007.03.005
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transl Res ISSN: 1878-1810 Impact factor: 7.012