ANTIBODY-INDUCED VONWILLEBRANDS DISEASE - NEWLY DEFINED INHIBITOR SYNDROME

  • 1 January 1976
    • journal article
    • research article
    • Vol. 48 (3), 393-405
Abstract
A patient is described with clinical and laboratory evidence of von Willebrand''s disease (VWD) in association with lymphosarcoma. He consistently had a bleeding time of over 20 min; factor VIIIAHF [factor VIII coagulant activity], VIIIAGN [factor VIII associated antigen] and VIIIVWF [von Willebrand factor] under 20%; and severe, diffuse hemorrhage. Following transfusion with cryoprecipitate, the patient had the expected rise in VIIIAGN and VIIIAHF, but no secondary increment in VIIIAHF. The patient''s plasma contained an inhibitor which prevented aggregation of normal platelets by ristocetin, but which did not interfere with the measurement of VIIIAGN or inactivate VIIIAHF activity. The inhibitor was present in serum heated at 56.degree. C for 30 min, was present in a purified IgG [immunoglobulin G] fraction of serum, and was precipitated by anti-human IgG. The antibody did not interact directly with washed platelets, but appeared to interact with that portion of the factor VII protein that supports ristocetin aggregation (VIIIVWF). The data provide an explanation for the pathophysiology of the acquired von Willebrand''s syndrome.