Two families are described with members who have both von Willebrand's disease and telangiectasias. Family A has four members in three consecutive generations that have both von Willebrand's disease and telangiectasias. von Willebrand's disease in this family is characterized by decreased ristocetin cofactor (FVIII-vWF), variably depressed factor VIII coagulant (FVIII-AHG), and factor VIII-related antigen (FVIII-AGN) levels. FVIII-AGN mobility on two-dimensional crossed immunoelectrophoresis was found to be normal. Four generations in Family B have von Willebrand's disease characterized by decreased FVIIII-AHG, FVIII-vWF, FVIII-AGN, and prolonged template bleeding times. Two members of this family also have telangiectasias and recurrent gastrointestinal bleeding. Results in these two families suggest an association between von Willebrand's disease and telangiectasia--perhaps a defect in vascular endothelial cell function.
We report the case of a 34-year-old woman with recurrent pure red cell aplasia and evidence of hepatitis B and C infection. Review of the English literature identified 19 prior cases in which pure red cell aplasia was associated with hepatitis. This case is the first in which serologic evidence of hepatitis C infection was documented. This patient also had porphyria cutanea tarda and marked hepatic siderosis but no active hepatitis or cirrhosis. Treatment with cyclophosphamide and prednisone produced complete remission of the pure red cell aplasia. Erythroid colony formation (colony-forming unit-erythroid and erythroid burst-forming unit) was reduced in cultures of bone marrow obtained during relapse but was normal in remission marrow. However, addition of the patient serum, whether collected during relapse or remission, inhibited erythroid colony formation by her bone marrow. These observations, and the known extrahepatic immunologic manifestations of hepatitis C infection, suggest that the pure red cell aplasia occurred because of autoimmune mechanism provoked by the infection.
A 38-year-old male patient with a life-long history of easy bruising and mild bleeding had a prolonged activated partial thromboplastin time (APTT), prothrombin time (PT), and thrombin time (TT). Reptilase (Bathrops atrox) clotting time was normal. His undiluted and diluted plasma prolonged the APTT, PT, and TT of normal plasma. Fibrin produced from patient plasma was insoluble in 5 M urea. Plasma fibrinogen level was increased when measured as clottable protein and by Laurell electroimmunoassay. Specific assays of plasma factors II, V, VII, X, VIII, IX, XI, and XII were normal. A circulating antithrombin in patient plasma was excluded by demonstrating normal thrombin-induced platelet aggregation of gel-separated platelets in the presence of patient plasma. Purified patient fibrinogen reproduced the anticoagulant effect of patient plasma. Patient fibrinogen antigen was similar to normal fibrinogen antigen by immunodiffusion, immunoelectrophoresis (pH 5.2 and 8.6), and crossed immunoelectrophoresis. His unreduced purified fibrinogen had normal migration on polyacrylamide slab gels. Also, the migration in gel slabs of A alpha, B beta and gamma-polypeptide chains, produced by mercaptoethanol reduction of purified patient fibrinogen, was similar to reduced normal fibrinogen. Thrombin-induced total fibrinopeptide release was normal. However, fibrin monomers produced from patient fibrinogen by thrombin (devoid of fibrinopeptides A and B) reaggregated abnormally; fibrin monomers produced by reptilase (devoid of only fibrinopeptides A) reaggregated normally. Fibrin generated from patient plasma in the presence of factor XIII and calcium, was defective in the formation of covalently bonded alpha-alpha polymers and demonstrated an increased susceptibility to the lytic effects of plasmin (generated in vitro by the addition of streptokinase).
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