Thrombosis research
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Thrombosis research · Jul 2016
Congenital afibrinogenemia: Identification and characterization of two novel homozygous fibrinogen Aα and Bβ chain mutations in two Tunisian families.
Inherited abnormalities of fibrinogen (FG) are rare coagulation disorders divided into two types: quantitative abnormalities (afibrinogenemia and hypofibrinogenemia) or qualitative abnormalities (dysfibrinogenemia and hypo-dysfibrinogenemia) of circulating fibrinogen. In particular, congenital afibrinogenemia is inherited as an autosomal recessive mode and is usually determined by homozygous or compound heterozygous mutations affecting any of the three fibrinogen genes (FGA, FGB and FGG), resulting in the complete absence or extremely reduced amount of fibrinogen. The aim of the present study was to characterize the fibrinogen abnormalities in two Tunisian families. ⋯ Current molecular characterization of these two fibrinogen abnormalities confirms the importance of the first portion of αC-region (αC-connector) as well as the Bβ globular domain in the secretion processes.
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Thrombosis research · Jul 2016
Clinical factors associated with inappropriate prophylaxis of venous thromboembolic disease in critically ill patients. A single day cross-sectional study.
A poor implementation of VTE prophylactic measures recommended for critically ill patients has been observed in several epidemiological studies. The clinical factors associated with this have not been clearly established. The objective of our study was to identify which factors could be related to the inappropriate use of VTE prophylaxis. ⋯ Our study highlighted a poor compliance with the VTE prophylaxis recommendations proposed for critical patients. The implementation of specific protocols for prophylaxis that include a correct evaluation according to VTE and haemorrhage risk, would allow for optimisation of mechanical and combined prophylaxis, improving adherence to the clinical practice guidelines.
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Thrombosis research · Jul 2016
Direct oral anticoagulant drug level testing in clinical practice: A single institution experience.
We performed a review of all direct oral anticoagulant (DOAC) levels - ecarin times for dabigatran and anti-Xa levels for rivaroxaban and apixaban - ordered at our institution with the purpose of evaluating DOAC levels from "real-world" (non-clinical trial) patients taking DOACs long-term, in order to assess levels obtained, reasons for checking levels, and actions taken based on the testing result. A total of 28 patients had 48 levels sent over a 36-month period. ⋯ The setting in which levels were sent influenced how results affected management decisions: in the outpatient setting, the majority of levels served to reassure clinicians that DOAC levels were within expected ranges resulting in continuation of chosen management, whereas in the inpatient setting, DOAC levels were used most frequently to detect DOAC presence in urgent clinical situations and influenced clinical decision-making in the peri-procedural and pre-operative periods. Our results demonstrate that while testing may be useful if immediately available in urgent clinical situations where assessment of drug presence is needed, DOAC level monitoring is infrequently used overall, and the lack of use combined with the paucity of available evidence to guide clinical decision-making based on the results suggests there is little urgency to make the tests widely available for routine use outside of acute settings in the emergency department and urgent surgical setting.
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Thrombosis research · Jul 2016
Effects of exercise intensity on clot microstructure and mechanical properties in healthy individuals.
Exercise is well established to lead to exercise-induced hypercoagulability, as demonstrated by kinetic coagulation markers. It remains unclear as to whether exercise-induces changes lead in clot development and increased polymerisation. Fractal dimension (df) has been shown to act as a marker of clot microstructure and mechanical properties, and may provide a more meaningful method of determining the relationship between exercise-induced hypercoagulability and potential clot development. ⋯ This study demonstrates that df is a sensitive technique which quantifies the structure and properties of blood clots following exercise. In healthy individuals, the haemostatic balance between coagulation and fibrinolysis is maintained in equilibrium following exercise. In individuals with underlying vascular damage who participate in exercise, this equilibrium may be displaced and lead to enhanced clot formation and a prothrombotic state. df may therefore have the potential to not only quantify hypercoagulability, but may also be useful in screening these individuals.
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Thrombosis research · Jul 2016
Letter Case ReportsIntracranial subdural hematomas with elevated rivaroxaban concentration and subsequently detected spinal subdural hematoma: A case report.
A 79-year-old lean man with a height of 157cm and weight of 42kg (body mass index, 17.2kg/m(2)) receiving rivaroxaban developed an intracranial subdural hematoma and was treated conservatively. Because he had a reduced creatinine clearance of 44mL/min, his dosage of rivaroxaban was reduced from 15 to 10mg daily according to official Japanese prescribing information. However, he developed bilateral intracranial subdural hematomas 2weeks later. ⋯ He was treated conservatively and discharged without neurological sequelae. The main cause of the increased concentration of rivaroxaban was believed to be his older age and low body weight. The etiology of the spinal hematoma was suspected to be the migration of intracranial hematoma to the spinal subdural space.