pubmed:abstractText |
In 107 asymptomatic and untreated patients with inherited syndromes associated with thrombophilia (antithrombin III, protein C and protein S deficiencies), we compared in parallel two plasma peptides which reflect activation of the common coagulation pathway: the prothrombin fragment 1 + 2 (F1 + 2) and fibrinopeptide A (FPA). Both F1 + 2 and FPA were measured with simple, commercially available ELISA methods. High levels of F1 + 2 or FPA were found in about one fourth of the patients as a whole. When patients were divided according to the type of inherited thrombophilic syndrome, it appeared that F1 + 2 was more frequently elevated in protein C and protein S deficiencies than in antithrombin deficiency; and that, in general, it was no more frequently elevated than FPA. Although our data confirm the existence of a procoagulant imbalance in inherited thrombophilic syndromes due to defects of natural anticoagulant proteins, they do not confirm that such imbalance can be more frequently diagnosed by measuring F1 + 2 levels, particularly in patients with antithrombin deficiency.
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