scholarly journals Another Inherited Abnormality in Plasma Fibrinogen

1977 ◽  
Author(s):  
N. B. Bosch ◽  
C. L. Arocha-Piñango ◽  
A. Rodriguez ◽  
A. Ojeda ◽  
Z. Carvajal

A prolonged thrombin and reptilase time with normal fibrinogen concentration in a 9 — years old girl, with no history of bleeding, prompted us to study the behaviour of her fibrinogen. Thrombin and reptilase time in different conditions, immunolectrophoresis, immunodiffusion and fibrin polymerization were performed. The thrombin time was partially -corrected by calcium, ionic strength and increasing concentration of thrombin. Fibrin polymerization rate and monomer aggregation time were moderately abnormal. Immunodiffusion and immunoelectrophoresis showed lines of identity with the normal. The electrophoretic -mobility of the α β and γ fibrin chains was normal, but there was a large amount of α — chain left in the cross-linked fibrin,in the presence of factor XIII. The above results suggest the presence of another fibrinogen variant.

1975 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. S. Lane ◽  
O. H. Baugh ◽  
P. T. Flude

In high concentrations, Arvin (Ancrod) splits fibrinogen α-chains into fragments of 39,000 and 31,000 molecular weight. In a patient with mild chronic DIC, secondary to a dissecting aneurysm, plasma fibrinogen exhibited marked resistance to normal α-chain proteolysis by Arvin. The patient showed a moderate haemostatic defect acquired from the time of aortic dissection: bleeding was stopped with EACA. Tests were consistent with the presence in plasma of high and low molecular weight FDP, thus deficient haemostasis could be explained by defective fibrin polymerization and X-linking.The α-chain resistance to Arvin was a coincidental finding. Does this behaviour represent a defect and, if so, is it congenital, or acquired representing a previously unencountered phenomenon associated with DIG? The data show Arvin to be a valuable agent for the rapid isolation and investigation of fibrinogen in normal and pathological plasmas.


1973 ◽  
Vol 30 (01) ◽  
pp. 123-132 ◽  
Author(s):  
R.N Banerjee ◽  
A.L Sahni ◽  
Vijay Kumar

SummaryImmunofluorescent demonstrations of platelet-free fibrin deposit in the micro and macro-vascular lesions of maturity onset diabetes mellitus and atherosclerosis by earlier workers called for investigations of fibrino-coagulopathy in the two disorders. The present investigation included the determinations of plasma thrombin time (PTCT), fibrinogen concentration (FC), plasma fibrinogen half life (PFT ½) and plasma fibrinogen degradation product (FDP) in (i) the subjects of the two age-onset disorders and their consanguinous family members, and (ii) juvenile diabetes.The assays were carried out by standard methods. 125Iodine labelled human fibrinogen was used for half life studies.In a study of 525 subjects, very highly significant (p <0.001) reduction in PTCT, FC and PFT ½ with a very highly significant (p < 0.001) elevation of FDP were observed in the patients of the two age onset disorders. The results were normal in juvenile diabetes.The study provides convincing evidence of a ‘state of slow consumptive fibrino-coagulopathy’ in the subjects and their siblings with the observed haemostatic defect likely being due to genetically determined Anti-thrombin III deficiency. This observation stimulates a unitary concept of a primary fibrinopathic vascular aetio-pathogenesis, with selective localisation in the macro and microvascular compartment being responsible for the clinical syndromes of ischaemic and metabolic alterations in athersclerosis and maturity onset diabetes mellitus respectively.


1979 ◽  
Author(s):  
K.A. Rickard ◽  
J. Burridge ◽  
T. Exner ◽  
P. Power

An assessment of fibrinogen concentration is basic to any investigation of clotting dysfunction and often an estimate of fibrinogen level is needed rapidly as an indication of consumptive coagulopathy or fibrinolysis. Fibrinogen levels in a variety of clinical plasma samples were assessed concurrently by several methods. Results were correlated against a reference method based on Ancrod-clottable fibrinogen and calibrated by U.V. absorbance with alkaline solutions of carefully dried fibrin standard. The best correlations with the reference method were achieved by an immunologic method using the Centrifichem principle and by heat precipitation with quantitation by packing in micro-haematocrit tubes. A modified clot opacity method also gave acceptable results. The turbidimetric ammonium sulphate and sodium sulphite precipitation methods correlated less well with the reference method, and in particular the sodium sulphite technique gave high apparent fibrinogen levels with jaundiced plasmas. Neither of the turbidimeteric methods were useful for fibrinogen levels below 50mg/dl. The thrombin time method showed excellent sensitivity to fibrinogen, even at very low fibrinogen levels, but did not correlate well with the reference method. This apparently conflicts with the findings of a recent CAP survey which strongly favoured the thrombin time method. We believe there is a danger that such surveys promote test methods on which there is good inter-labotatory agreement, but which may not be specific in function.


Blood ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 118 (21) ◽  
pp. 1212-1212
Author(s):  
Katharine Hodby ◽  
Emma Phillips ◽  
Suzi Shapiro ◽  
Michael Laffan ◽  
Richard Manning ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 1212 The heritable dysfibrinogenaemias (HD) are a heterogenous group of qualitative disorders of fibrinogen in which there is abnormal fibrin clot formation. Affected individuals usually display prolonged thrombin (TCT) and reptilase clotting times (RCT) and reduced plasma fibrinogen activity. The plasma fibrinogen concentration is normal or is reduced less than the fibrinogen activity. HD is associated with pathogenic mutations in FGA, FGB or FGG genes that encode the fibrinogen Aα, Bβ and g chains respectively. However, most clinical descriptions of HD comprise single case reports and the range of phenotype and genotype in the wider population is difficult to estimate. In order to improve understanding of this disorder, we now report a cross-sectional survey of 22 subjects with HD identified at 2 UK regional Haemostasis centres from 2001–11. We recruited index cases from our Haemostasis laboratory referral practice who satisfied all the following criteria- 1) prolonged TCT; 2) prolonged TCT with protamine (TCTP) and/or prolonged RCT; 3) reduced Clauss fibrinogen and 4) normal fibrinogen dry clot weight. Demographic and clinical characteristics were recorded using a standardised case report form. Genetic analysis was performed by Sanger sequencing of FGA exon 2, FGB exon 2 and FGG exon 8 which we identified as mutation hotspots from the fibrinogen mutation database (http://www.geht.org/databaseang/fibrinogen/). Phenotype and genotype was also determined in available first degree family members. We identified 16 index cases and 6 family members with HD (median age 41, range 12–78; 9 males). HD was identified in plasma submitted to our Haemostasis laboratories for the investigation of bleeding in 8/16 (50%) index cases, for stroke in 1/16 (6%) and for ‘routine coagulation screening’ in 7/16 (44%). Mild mucocutaneous bleeding or menorrhagia was documented in the clinical records of 13/22 (59%) subjects and thrombotic stroke in 1/22 (5%). 8/22 (36%) subjects were asymptomatic. The prothrombin time (PT) was prolonged in 21/22 (95%) subjects (median 15.3 s; range 11.4–16.7; reference interval (RI) 9.6–11.6) but the activated partial thromboplastin time (aPTT) was prolonged in only 1/22 (5%; median 23.8 s; range 22.8–37.0, RI 24.0–32.0). The median TCT was 28.6 s (range 20.6–45.7; RI 13–19) and TCTP 31.9 s (n=11; range 20.0–35.5; RI 13–19). The median RCT was 37s (n=12; range 19–68; RI 15–19), Clauss fibrinogen 0.49 g/dL (range 0.29–1.3; RI 1.8–3.6) and dry clot weight 2.3 g/dL (range 1.9–4.2; RI 1.8–3.6). Heterozygous missense nucleotide variations were identified in the candidate exons of the fibrinogen genes in all 16/16 (100%) index cases and segregated with the HD phenotype in all available family members. These variations predicted aminoacid substitutions at the fibrinopeptide A cleavage site in the fibrinogen Aa chain in 10/16 (63%) index cases (FGA p.R35H (n=4); p.R35S (n=3); p.R35P (n=2) and p.G36S (n=1); numbered from RefSeq NP_000499.1) or at nearby residues (FGA p.V39D (n=1) and p.F27C (n=1)). FGG variations were identified in 3 index cases that predicted aminoacid substitutions in the fibrinogen g chain region necessary for D:D domain interactions during fibrin monomer assembly (FGG p.R301H (n=1), p.D342G (n=1) and p.A367T (n=1); RefSeq NP_000499.1). One subject harboured a FGB variation that predicted a p.R44C substitution (Refseq NP_005132.2) at the fibrinopeptide B cleavage site in the fibrinogen Bb chain. The FGA p.R35S, p.R35H, FGB p.R44C and FGG p.R301H and p.A367T substitutions have been associated previously with HD. We show that the HD laboratory phenotype is rare and was frequently identified in subjects with mild bleeding. However, HD was also commonly asymptomatic and did not segregate with bleeding symptoms within affected families suggesting that the HD variants identified in this study do not confer significant bleeding risk. The prevalence of mild bleeding in some study subjects may reflect recruitment bias. We also show that HD is strongly associated with nucleotide variations in the FGA, FGB or FGG genes. All the observed nucleotide variations have been previously associated with HD and/or predict aminoacid substitutions in critical regions for normal fibrin polymerization. Defective fibrin polymerization may affect endpoint determination in some automated clotting assays and is likely to account for the consistent finding of prolonged PT in the study subjects. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Blood ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 122 (21) ◽  
pp. 2362-2362
Author(s):  
Premal Lulla ◽  
Swapan Dasgupta ◽  
Lawrence Rice ◽  
John J. McCarthy ◽  
Perumal Thiagarajan

Abstract A 88 year-old woman was referred to our center for 3 weeks of gastrointestinal bleeding and a spontaneous right rectus femoris hematoma. The prothrombin time (PT), activated partial thromboplastin time (aPTT), thrombin time (TT) and reptilase time (RT) were markedly prolonged (Table 1). Assays for coagulation factors V, VIII, IX and X were normal. A fibrinogen concentration of < 50 mg/dl was measured by Clauss method while fibrinogen concentration measured by radial immunodiffusion was 180 mg/dl. Following infusions of cryoprecipitate there was accelerated clearance of fibrinogen as measured by the Clauss method. An inhibitor of fibrinogen function was suspected.Table 1TestTime (sec)1:1 mix (sec)Normal Range (sec)PT>902212-15aPTT70.73923-36TT>120>12015-19Reptilase Time>120>12014.8-20.4 When the patient’s plasma was tested towards immobilized fibrinogen in ELISA plates, a concentration dependent specific binding of IgG was seen while under similar conditions control IgG had no significant binding (Figure 1). The IgG antibody was polyclonal comprising of both kappa and lambda subtypes. The IgG fraction was purified on a Protein A column and the isolated IgG fraction prolonged the thrombin time of normal plasma in a concentration dependent manner. The effect of the isolated IgG fraction on fibrin polymerization was measured by monitoring the absorbance at λ390 in a spectrophotometer. The IgG inhibited fibrin polymerization in a concentration dependent manner. Control IgGs had no significant effect on polymerization under these conditions (Figure 2). The immunologic specificity of antibody was tested in immunoblots of fibrinogen subjected to SDS-PAGE. The patients IgG reacted with fibrinogen in unreduced buffers. Under reducing conditions, the IgG reacted with Bβ and γ chains of fibrinogen while the control IgG did not (Figure 3). The patient was treated with rituximab and steroids. After four, weekly doses of rituximab, fibrinogen levels by Clauss method normalized (450 mg/dl). There was no detectable antibody to fibrinogen and no further bleeding was noted. Conclusion This is a description of a rare case of a polyclonal autoantibody to Bβ and γ chains of fibrinogen that inhibited fibrin polymerization leading to a severe bleeding diathesis. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


1979 ◽  
Author(s):  
K Rickard ◽  
J Burridge ◽  
T Exner ◽  
P Power

An assessment of fibrinogen concentration is basic to any investigation of clotting dysfunction and often an estimate of fibrinogen level is needed rapidly as an indication of consumptive coagulopathy or fibrinolysis. Fibrinogen levels in a variety of clinical plasma samples were assessed concurrently by several methods. Results were correlated against a reference method based on Ancrod-clottable fibrinogen and calibrated by U.V. absorbance with alkaline solutions of carefully dried fibrin standard. The best correlations with the reference method were achieved by an immunologic method using the Centrifichem principle and by heat precipitation with quantitation by packing in micro-haematocrit tubes. A modified clot opacity method also gave acceptable results. The turbidimetric ammonium sulphate and sodium sulphite precipitation methods correlated less well with the reference method, and in particular the sodium sulphite technique gave high apparent fibrinogen levels with jaundiced plasmas. Neither of the turbidimetric methods were useful for fibrinogen levels below 50mg/dl. The thrombin time method showed excellent sensitivity to fibrinogen, even at very low fibrinogen levels, but did not correlate well with the reference method. This apparently conflicts with the findings of a recent CAP survey which strongly favoured the thrombin time method. We believe there is a danger that such surveys promote test methods on which there is good interlaboratory agreement, but which may not be specific in function.


Author(s):  
A C Papp ◽  
R M Snopko ◽  
E R Cole ◽  
R J Sassetti ◽  
K K Wu

A 24 year old man with a history of multiple recurrent venous thrombosis was found to have a qualitatively abnormal fibrinogen. Plasma fibrinogen concentration by a kinetic thrombin time method was 135mg% as compared to 150mg% by the gravimetric method of Ratnoff and Menzie. The thrombin, reptilase and Russell viper venom times were all approximately 50% longer than the normal values. Neither the thrombin time nor reptilase time was corrected upon addition of CaCl2. Antigenic quantitation by Laurell immunoelectrophoresis gave a value of 320mg%. On Ouchterlony immunodiffusion plate, the patient’s plasma and normal plasma showed a line of identity. The patient’s fibrinogen had a normal rate of migration by one-dimensional immunoelectrophoresis but it exhibited an abnormal pattern upon crossed immunoelectrophoresis. The abnormality is characterized by the presence of a shoulder on the anodal side of the fibrinogen peak. Family studies revealed that the fibrinogen defect was inherited as an autosomal dominant trait. To determine whether recurrent venous thrombosis is related to increased viscosity due to the abnormal fibrinogen, fibrinogen was purified by the method of BlombSck and the relative viscosity of fibrinogen solution was determined. Preliminary data were suggestive of an increased viscosity of the patient’s fibrinogen. These findings indicate that the immunologically abnormal dysfibrinogen may be responsible for recurrent venous thrombosis because of alteration of the physicochemical properties of the fibrinogen molecule.


Blood ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 122 (21) ◽  
pp. 1097-1097
Author(s):  
Nathan J White ◽  
Yi Wang ◽  
Patrick Burney ◽  
Xiaoyun Fu ◽  
José A López ◽  
...  

Abstract Introduction The concentration of clottable fibrinogen in plasma decreases rapidly after severe traumatic injury and resuscitation, a reduction associated with both greater transfusion requirements and mortality. Fibrinogen is very sensitive to oxidative modification by oxidants generated during ischemia and inflammation, including hypochlorous acid and peroxynitrite, which both can oxidize methionine to methionine sulfoxide. Here, we investigated the potential of this mechanism to contribute to the coagulopathy of trauma. Methods We obtained plasma, clinical data, and outcomes from a biorepository of trauma patients presenting to the Emergency Department of a local Level I trauma center. Subjects with plasma INR ≥1.3 were defined as being coagulopathic while those with INR<1.3 were used as non-coagulpathic controls. We precipitated fibrinogen from plasma with glycine and tested it for the presence of methionine sulfoxide using tandem mass spectrometry. We also tested for defects in fibrin polymerization using thrombin time, reptilase time, and fibrinogen activity/antigenic ratio and correlated these changes with the presence of methionine sulfoxide in fibrinogen. The effects of selectively oxidizing certain methionine residues on fibrinogen structure and polymerization were then simulated using molecular dynamics. Results Trauma patients who were coagulopathic (N=31) required more blood products in the first 24 hours of care compared to non-coagulopathic subjects (N=30) (mean PRBC: 3.9 vs. 0.5 units, p < 0.001; mean plasma transfused: 3.2 vs. 0.2 units, p < 0.001; and mean platelets transfused: 0.8 vs. 0.2 units, p=0.008) and were more likely to die (29% vs. 10% mortality, ChiSqr Likelihood Ratio p=0.056). Methionine sulfoxide was selectively increased in coagulopathic trauma patients at position 476 in the alpha C domain compared to controls [mean(SEM) 1.8(0.1)% vs. 2.5(0.1)%, p=0.003] and this low-level of oxidation was confirmed to be associated with an increasing reptilase time in vitro. Mean thrombin time (16 vs. 17.8 sec, p = 0.01) and reptilase times (18.2 vs. 23.7 sec, p<0.001) were prolonged in coagulopathic subjects and the fibrinogen activity/antigen ratio, standardized to albumin content to adjust for hemodilution, tended to be higher in coagulopathic patients (1.3 vs. 1.6, p = 0.06). Percent M476alpha oxidation was associated with increased INR (R=0.5, p=0.016), lower clottable fibrinogen concentration (R=-0.546, p=0.009), increased thrombin time (R=0.4, p=0.04), and increased reptilase time (R=0.5, p=0.01). Using multivariate regression, M476alpha oxidation remained significantly associated with reptilase time (M476alpha p=0.035) after adjusting for D-dimer concentration, fibrinogen concentration, and volume of plasma transfused at the time of measurement (whole model R2=0.77, p=0.003). When M476alpha oxidation was introduced into a human fibrinogen alpha C domain homology model, thermodynamic fluctuations were reduced, favoring a more-open configuration for beta sheet-hairpins that are hypothesized to play a role in fibrin monomer lateral aggregation by their dimerization and oligomerization via beta-hairpin swapping. Conclusions The level of oxidation of methionine residues in fibrinogen was increased in coagulopathic trauma patients presenting to the Emergency Department. Even at low levels, this modification was associated with altered fibrin polymerization suggesting that it may contribute mechanistically to coagulopathy by altering fibrin alpha C domain dimerization during the lateral aggregation of fibrin monomer. Disclosures: White: Stasys Medical Corp: Consultancy, Equity Ownership, Membership on an entity’s Board of Directors or advisory committees, Patents & Royalties; Vidacare Corp: Honoraria; NIH: Research Funding; Coulter Foundation: Research Funding; Washington State Life Sciences Discovery Fund: Research Funding.


Blood ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 105 (8) ◽  
pp. 3162-3168 ◽  
Author(s):  
Margaret A. Keller ◽  
Josè Martinez ◽  
Timothy C. Baradet ◽  
Chandrasekaran Nagaswami ◽  
Irina N. Chernysh ◽  
...  

AbstractFibrinogen Philadelphia, a hypodysfibrinogenemia described in a family with a history of bleeding, is characterized by prolonged thrombin time, abnormal fibrin polymerization, and increased catabolism of the abnormal fibrinogen. Turbidity studies of polymerization of purified fibrinogen under different ionic conditions reveal a reduced lag period and lower final turbidity, indicating more rapid initial polymerization and impaired lateral aggregation. Consistent with this, scanning and transmission electron microscopy show fibers with substantially lower average fiber diameters. DNA sequence analysis of the fibrinogen genes A, B, and G revealed a T&gt;C transition in exon 9 resulting in a serine-to-proline substitution near the γ chain C-terminus (S378P). The S378P mutation is associated with fibrinogen Philadelphia in this kindred and was not found in 10 controls. This region of the γ chain is involved in fibrin polymerization, supporting this as the polymerization defect causing the mutation. Thus, this abnormal fibrinogen is characterized by 2 unique features: (1) abnormal polymerization probably due to a major defect in lateral aggregation and (2) hypercatabolism of the mutant protein. The location, nature, and unusual characteristics of this mutation may add to our understanding of fibrinogen protein interactions necessary for normal catabolism and fibrin formation.


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