| Literature DB >> 35630108 |
Miruna Samfireag1,2, Cristina Potre3, Ovidiu Potre3, Raluca Tudor4, Teodora Hoinoiu1,2, Andrei Anghel5.
Abstract
Thrombophilia is a genetic predisposition to hypercoagulable states caused by acquired haemostasis conditions; pregnancy causes the haemostatic system to become hypercoagulable, which grows throughout the pregnancy and peaks around delivery. Genetic testing for thrombophilic gene mutations is evaluated using different methodologies of real-time polymerase chain reaction and DNA microarrays of specific genes. Adapting the general care of the pregnant woman to the particularities caused by thrombophilia is an important component, so screening is preferred to assess the degree of genetic damage that manifests itself as a risk of thrombosis. The major goal of this narrative review was to quantitatively evaluate the literature data on the specific care of pregnant women with thrombophilia that are at risk of developing unplanned miscarriages.Entities:
Keywords: genetic testing; narrative review; pregnancy; screening; thrombophilia
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35630108 PMCID: PMC9145888 DOI: 10.3390/medicina58050692
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Medicina (Kaunas) ISSN: 1010-660X Impact factor: 2.948
Figure 1Progression of hereditary thrombophilia testing (information taken from [5]).
Preferred prophylaxis in order to prevent pregnancy-related complications in women diagnosed with inherited thrombophilia—summary of recommendations (American College of Chest Physicians).
| Prevention of Pregnancy-Related | Recommendations |
|---|---|
| No previous VTE | |
|
Absence of a family history of VTE: |
antepartum clinical surveillance post-delivery prophylaxis up to 6 weeks |
|
With a positive family history of VTE: |
antepartum prophylaxis |
|
post-delivery prophylaxis | |
| LOW RISK: other forms of | |
|
Absence of a family history of VTE: |
antepartum and post-delivery clinical surveillance |
|
With a positive family history of VTE: |
antepartum clinical surveillance post-delivery prophylaxis up to 6 weeks |
| Previous VTE |
antepartum prophylaxis |
| One or multiple episodes of VTE: |
post-delivery prophylaxis up to 6 weeks |
| LOW RISK: |
antepartum clinical surveillance |
Information taken from [25,54,55].
Management at the time of labour.
| Administrated Agents— | Recommendations |
|---|---|
| UFH |
checking activated partial thromboplastin time and considering administrating protamine sulphate in case it is prolonged to reduce the risk of bleeding. |
| LMWH |
checking out anti Xa levels and testing D-Dimers; in case of bleeding, protamine sulfate may offer limited neutralization; major bleeding—recombinant activated factor VII concentrate in case there is lack of response to classic therapy; |