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Tissue factor dependent pathway and the diagnosis of pre-eclampsia

Tissue factor dependent pathway and the diagnosis of pre-eclampsia
Tissue factor dependent pathway and the diagnosis of pre-eclampsia
Pre-eclampsia (P-EC) is a major contributor to perinatal and maternal morbidity and mortality worldwide. Its etiology and pathogenesis remains poorly understood, and differential diagnosis is problematic. During a normal pregnancy, coagulation activation is essential for physiological placental hemostasis, but women with P-EC tend to be more hypercoagulable than normal pregnant women. A common proposed mechanism for P-EC is utero-placental thrombosis. Indeed, multiple placental microthrombi are frequently observed in women with P-EC, and these may compromise placental perfusion and fetal development. This suggests that predisposing factors to thrombosis could contribute to the development of P-EC. Thus studying circulating hemostatic proteins may help elucidate some of the pathogenesis of P-EC and may provide a rational basis for its differential diagnosis and effective treatment. Preliminary studies by our group on third-trimester women suggest that raised circulating factor VII (FVII) is a selective marker for P-EC when women with P-EC were compared with healthy nonpregnant or normal pregnant women groups. Plasma FVII levels have shown good sensitivity and specificity for P-EC of 90% and 80%, respectively. However, significant comparable changes in the other tissue factor (TF)-dependent pathway factors (activated FVII), TF, and tissue factor pathway inhibitor were not observed. Thus we propose the use of plasma FVII as a potential marker of P-EC.
coagulation, FVII, FVIIa, TF, TFPI, pre-eclampsia
2567-689X
125-130
Lwaleed, Bashir A.
e7c59131-82ad-4a14-a227-7370e91e3f21
Dusse, Luci
3837ba98-3fe1-4b3f-b208-3af9ef7c8727
Cooper, Alan
9971af32-4b24-4794-b5b1-e4c78965e191
Lwaleed, Bashir A.
e7c59131-82ad-4a14-a227-7370e91e3f21
Dusse, Luci
3837ba98-3fe1-4b3f-b208-3af9ef7c8727
Cooper, Alan
9971af32-4b24-4794-b5b1-e4c78965e191

Lwaleed, Bashir A., Dusse, Luci and Cooper, Alan (2011) Tissue factor dependent pathway and the diagnosis of pre-eclampsia. Thrombosis and Hemostasis, 37 (2), 125-130. (doi:10.1055/s-0030-1270338). (PMID:21370212)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Pre-eclampsia (P-EC) is a major contributor to perinatal and maternal morbidity and mortality worldwide. Its etiology and pathogenesis remains poorly understood, and differential diagnosis is problematic. During a normal pregnancy, coagulation activation is essential for physiological placental hemostasis, but women with P-EC tend to be more hypercoagulable than normal pregnant women. A common proposed mechanism for P-EC is utero-placental thrombosis. Indeed, multiple placental microthrombi are frequently observed in women with P-EC, and these may compromise placental perfusion and fetal development. This suggests that predisposing factors to thrombosis could contribute to the development of P-EC. Thus studying circulating hemostatic proteins may help elucidate some of the pathogenesis of P-EC and may provide a rational basis for its differential diagnosis and effective treatment. Preliminary studies by our group on third-trimester women suggest that raised circulating factor VII (FVII) is a selective marker for P-EC when women with P-EC were compared with healthy nonpregnant or normal pregnant women groups. Plasma FVII levels have shown good sensitivity and specificity for P-EC of 90% and 80%, respectively. However, significant comparable changes in the other tissue factor (TF)-dependent pathway factors (activated FVII), TF, and tissue factor pathway inhibitor were not observed. Thus we propose the use of plasma FVII as a potential marker of P-EC.

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More information

e-pub ahead of print date: 2 March 2011
Published date: March 2011
Keywords: coagulation, FVII, FVIIa, TF, TFPI, pre-eclampsia
Organisations: Faculty of Health Sciences

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 347871
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/347871
ISSN: 2567-689X
PURE UUID: 7e895be4-829b-4d10-9aea-5bb14e2b4b64

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Date deposited: 31 Jan 2013 15:23
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 12:53

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Author: Luci Dusse
Author: Alan Cooper

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