| Literature DB >> 34394804 |
Miyoba Melinda Munsanje1,2, Trevor Kaile3, Sumbukeni Kowa4, Musalula Sinkala2, Marah Simakando2, Jacob Ndhlovu5, Brian Chanda Chiluba6.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: von Willebrand Disease (vWD) is the most prevalent bleeding disorder. Women are more likely to manifest abnormal bleeding symptoms due to physiologic events and menorrhagia is the most common presenting symptom.Entities:
Keywords: Activated partial thromboplastin time; bleeding disorders; blood groups; menorrhagia; von Willebrand disease; von Willebrand factor activity
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34394804 PMCID: PMC8348282 DOI: 10.11604/pamj.2021.39.13.13742
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pan Afr Med J
Figure 1the trends of the age of participants (first y-axis) and percentage of the total running sum of age (second y-axis) for age (bin) on the x-axis; the histogram shows counts for each bin of age; for pane percentage of the total running sum of age: colour shows details about the group
Figure 2(A,B) the mean VWF activity in women with menorrhagia was lower (66.6%) than that of women without menorrhagia (97.8%) p<0.001; this may explain why these women had menorrhagia; the mean aPTT of the women with menorrhagia was only slightly but not significantly higher (31.09s) than that of women without menorrhagia (30.40s) p = 0.593
descriptive statistics of vWF activity and aPTT levels
| Measurements | Condition | N | Mean | Median | Std. Dev. | Range | Min | Max |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No menorrhagia | 112 | 97.8 | 80.4 | 231.7 | 53.1 | 22 | 253.7 | |
| Menorrhagia | 56 | 66.7 | 63.3 | 162.5 | 31.5 | 23.1 | 185.6 | |
| No Menorrhagia | 112 | 30.4 | 28.7 | 42.8 | 7.7 | 18.3 | 61.1 | |
| Menorrhagia | 56 | 31.1 | 29.5 | 40.7 | 8.3 | 20 | 60.7 |
Mean vWF activity was higher in cases than controls. Mean aPTT was higher in cases than controls
Figure 3the mean Von Willebrand factor activity levels in Blood group O women was slightly but not significantly lower (86.3%) than in the other women with blood groups A, B and AB (88.0%) p = 0.467
characteristics of cases and controls
| Characteristic | Women with menorrhagia n=56 | Women without menorrhagia n=112 | P value | Odds Ratio |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Epistaxis | 13 (23.2%) | 5(4.5%) | <0.001 | |
| vWD | 6 (10.7%) | 2(1.8%) | 0.017 | 6.6 |
| 76 | 89 | |||
| vWF activity | 86.3 | 88 | 0.467 | |
| Control | African | 30 | A+ | No |
| Control | African | 18 | O+ | No |
| Case | African | 41 | A+ | Yes |
| Case | African | 28 | O+ | No |
| Case | African | 24 | O+ | No |
| Case | African | 27 | A+ | No |
| Case | African | 29 | A+ | Yes |
| Case | African | 27 | O+ | No |
Figure 4there was a significantly higher percentage of women with menorrhagia (6%) that reported a family history of menorrhagia compared to women without menorrhagia (2.4%) p = 0.003 meaning a positive family history of menorrhagia increased the chances of having menorrhagia
Figure 5a higher number of women with menorrhagia (13) reported to have suffered epistaxis compared to women without menorrhagia (5); there was a positive association between the menorrhagia and epistaxis p<0.001