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Inherited prothrombotic states and ischaemic stroke in childhood

Inherited prothrombotic states and ischaemic stroke in childhood
Inherited prothrombotic states and ischaemic stroke in childhood

Objective: to investigate the prevalence of currently recognised inherited prothrombotic states in a population of children with arterial stroke.

Methods: children with arterial stroke presenting to a tertiary level paediatric neurology centre between 1990 and 1996 were investigated for inherited prothrombotic states.

Results: sixty seven children with arterial stroke were investigated. Abnormalities were initially identified in 16 patients; however, only eight children (12%) had an inherited prothrombotic state. This was type 1 protein S deficiency in one patient, the factor V Leiden mutation in six, and activated protein C resistance (without the factor V Leiden mutation) in one. The prevalence of the factor V Leiden mutation was not significantly higher in children with arterial stroke (12%) than in a control population of children without thrombosis attending the same institution (5.2%; Fisher's exact test, p = 0.19; difference in prevalence between patients and controls (95% confidence interval) = 6.8% (-2.78% to 16.8%)).

Conclusions: currently recognised inherited prothrombotic tendencies were rarely associated with stroke in this group of children, although larger numbers of patients would be needed to confirm this. Age appropriate normal values should be used when interpreting the results of a prothrombotic screen. Prothrombotic abnormalities seen acutely are as often transient as inherited. Longitudinal assessment and family studies are required before low concentrations of an anticoagulant protein found acutely can be attributed to an inherited abnormality.

Childhood, Factor V Leiden, Prothrombotic states, Stroke
0022-3050
508-511
Ganesan, V.
0541b25d-409b-434a-b628-8df993f1d8c8
McShane, M.A.
b15a2629-c057-49ad-9826-3b800227b373
Liesner, R.
38a5a5b9-bfc5-4eb0-b706-21bc552a3e67
Cookson, J.
0b976329-4dca-444f-a270-809f0f8c6abc
Hann, I.
f1d42768-064e-4663-b855-fa2206f2e05d
Kirkham, F.J.
1dfbc0d5-aebe-4439-9fb2-dac6503bcd58
Ganesan, V.
0541b25d-409b-434a-b628-8df993f1d8c8
McShane, M.A.
b15a2629-c057-49ad-9826-3b800227b373
Liesner, R.
38a5a5b9-bfc5-4eb0-b706-21bc552a3e67
Cookson, J.
0b976329-4dca-444f-a270-809f0f8c6abc
Hann, I.
f1d42768-064e-4663-b855-fa2206f2e05d
Kirkham, F.J.
1dfbc0d5-aebe-4439-9fb2-dac6503bcd58

Ganesan, V., McShane, M.A., Liesner, R., Cookson, J., Hann, I. and Kirkham, F.J. (1998) Inherited prothrombotic states and ischaemic stroke in childhood. Journal of Neurology Neurosurgery and Psychiatry, 65 (4), 508-511. (doi:10.1136/jnnp.65.4.508).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objective: to investigate the prevalence of currently recognised inherited prothrombotic states in a population of children with arterial stroke.

Methods: children with arterial stroke presenting to a tertiary level paediatric neurology centre between 1990 and 1996 were investigated for inherited prothrombotic states.

Results: sixty seven children with arterial stroke were investigated. Abnormalities were initially identified in 16 patients; however, only eight children (12%) had an inherited prothrombotic state. This was type 1 protein S deficiency in one patient, the factor V Leiden mutation in six, and activated protein C resistance (without the factor V Leiden mutation) in one. The prevalence of the factor V Leiden mutation was not significantly higher in children with arterial stroke (12%) than in a control population of children without thrombosis attending the same institution (5.2%; Fisher's exact test, p = 0.19; difference in prevalence between patients and controls (95% confidence interval) = 6.8% (-2.78% to 16.8%)).

Conclusions: currently recognised inherited prothrombotic tendencies were rarely associated with stroke in this group of children, although larger numbers of patients would be needed to confirm this. Age appropriate normal values should be used when interpreting the results of a prothrombotic screen. Prothrombotic abnormalities seen acutely are as often transient as inherited. Longitudinal assessment and family studies are required before low concentrations of an anticoagulant protein found acutely can be attributed to an inherited abnormality.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 31 March 1998
e-pub ahead of print date: 1 October 1998
Published date: 1 October 1998
Keywords: Childhood, Factor V Leiden, Prothrombotic states, Stroke

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 429808
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/429808
ISSN: 0022-3050
PURE UUID: 81069572-8b8b-4d6a-b5cb-00f711e4cf55
ORCID for F.J. Kirkham: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-2443-7958

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Date deposited: 05 Apr 2019 16:30
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 03:22

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Contributors

Author: V. Ganesan
Author: M.A. McShane
Author: R. Liesner
Author: J. Cookson
Author: I. Hann
Author: F.J. Kirkham ORCID iD

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