| Literature DB >> 22574299 |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Virchow's triad in cardiovascular disease comprises blood viscosity, plasma D-dimer and homocysteine as indices of three associated but separate vascular phenomena. AIMS: This work investigates prevalence of hyperviscosity in hyperhomocysteinaemia and positive D-dimer; and differences or similarities in stasis status among sub-populations of hyperhomocysteinaemia vs. normohomocysteinaemia and negative vs. positive D-dimer. PATIENTS AND METHODS: 10-years de-identified archived clinical pathology data for the period of January 1999 to December 2008 were audited. All cases tested for D-dimer (n=6845) and homocysteine (n=1665), which were concomitantly tested for haematocrit and total proteins, were extracted.Entities:
Keywords: Cardiovascular complications; D-dimer; Virchow's triad; clinical laboratory evaluation; homocysteine; stasis; whole blood viscosity
Year: 2010 PMID: 22574299 PMCID: PMC3347631 DOI: 10.4297/najms.2010.2252
Source DB: PubMed Journal: N Am J Med Sci ISSN: 1947-2714
Fig. 1Illustration of multiple factors that have capacity to impact on whole blood viscosity. Keys: EOS = erythrocyte oxidative stress, HCY = homocysteine, PAI-1 = plasminogen activator inhibitor-1, WBV = whole blood viscosity, ↓ = decreased level, ↑ = increased level; red boxes = Virchow's triad components, grey boxes = other processes, light orange boxes & call out = pathophysiological effects, pink bars & call outs = key laboratory indicators
Summary demographics of D-dimer and homocysteine data
Prevalence (%) of different levels of blood viscosity associated with negative and positive plasma D-dimer results
Prevalence (%) of different levels of blood viscosity associated with negative and positive homocysteine results
Fig. 2Vein diagram showing abnormal presentations among the cases (n = 8) that were concomitantly tested for D-dimer, homocysteine, haematocrit and total proteins – 6 of 8 were positive for D-dimer and/or homocysteine; 2 of 8 presented normal results in all the tests; none is positive for WBV.