An Update on Hypercoagulable Disorders
Open Access
- 23 April 2001
- journal article
- review article
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA) in Archives of Internal Medicine
- Vol. 161 (8), 1051-1056
- https://doi.org/10.1001/archinte.161.8.1051
Abstract
Venous thrombosis is a cause of considerable morbidity and is often responsible for chronic venous disorders that frequently lead to visits to dermatologists and others involved in wound healing. Over the past several years, many new causes of thrombophilia have been identified and have dramatically altered the approach to patients presenting with thrombosis. Newly described abnormalities associated with thrombophilia include the syndrome of activated protein C resistance, the prothrombin 20210A mutation, hyperhomocysteinemia, and elevated levels of coagulation factors VIII and XI. Clinicians can now frequently determine causes of thromboses that have previously been deemed idiopathic.Keywords
This publication has 33 references indexed in Scilit:
- Venous Thrombosis in Older People: Prevalence of the Factor V Gene Mutation Q506Journal of the American Geriatrics Society, 1998
- Randomised trial of effect of compression stockings in patients with symptomatic proximal-vein thrombosisThe Lancet, 1997
- Recurrent Ulcerations on Both Legs since Early Childhood due to a Factor V Gene MutationDermatology, 1997
- Coagulation factor V gene mutation associated with activated protein C resistance leading to recurrent thrombosis, leg ulcers, and lymphedema: successful treatment with intermittent compressionJournal of the American Academy of Dermatology, 1996
- World distribution of factor V LeidenThe Lancet, 1995
- Mutation in blood coagulation factor V associated with resistance to activated protein CNature, 1994
- Venous thrombosis due to poor anticoagulant response to activated protein C: Leiden Thrombophilia StudyThe Lancet, 1993
- Familial thrombophilia due to a previously unrecognized mechanism characterized by poor anticoagulant response to activated protein C: prediction of a cofactor to activated protein C.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1993
- Leg ulcers: Epidemiology and aetiologyBritish Journal of Surgery, 1986
- Deficiency of protein C in congenital thrombotic disease.Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1981