SummaryA study has been undertaken in 72 women to provide systematic information on the changes that occur in a wide range of haemostatic variables during and after pregnancy. Factors VII, VIII :C, VIIIR:Ag, X, fibrinogen and α1 antitrypsin, rose markedly throughout pregnancy. Factors II and V and α2 macroglobulin all rose early on but then decreased steadily. Antithrombin III: C and Ag fell slightly. There was a marked decrease in fibrinolytic activity from 11-15 weeks onwards. Levels of fibrin degradation products rose from 21-25 weeks onwards. The rise in coagulation factors that occurs could be due to increased synthesis or increased activation by thrombin, or to both. The findings are consistent with a mild degree of local intravascular coagulation from early on in pregnancy in some women.
Long-term warfarin therapy was changed to subcutaneous heparin to cover a planned pregnancy in a patient with congenital antithrombin III (AT III) deficiency. Satisfactory anticoagulation was easily maintained in spite of low levels of biologically active AT III. Delivery and the puerperium were covered by a reduced dose of heparin and alternate day infusions of AT III concentrate. A mean dose of 0.77 U/kg of AT III concentrate produced a rise of 1% in AT III and the half-life was of the order of 24 h, with no evidence of increased consumption during labour and delivery. Pregnancy and labour were uncomplicated and resulted in delivery of a healthy female infant. The importance of early and adequate anticoagulation during pregnancy is emphasized.
Levels of haemostatic variables that may be involved in thrombogenesis have been compared in groups of men of similar mean age in communities at very low (Gambia), high (England and Czechoslovakia) or very high (Scotland and Finland) risk of ischaemic heart disease (IHD). There was a consistent gradient of higher factor VII levels with higher IHD risk and also suggestive gradients in the case of two other vitamin K dependent factors, factors II and X. Mean platelet counts were lower and mean fibrinolytic activity was greater in Gambian men than in European men. There was a suggestive though not entirely consistent association between mean fibrinogen levels and IHD risk in the groups from IHD-endemic countries. The results as a whole, and particularly those on factor VII, strengthen the case for the increasingly detailed epidemiological as well as laboratory investigation of the role of the haemostatic system in thrombogenesis and IHD.
walks because of the initial training effect. The time chosen to assess exercise tolerance by walking tests is not critical. Shorter times are easier for both patient and investigator and are as reproducible but discriminate slightly less well and have less of a training role. The six-minute walk may represent a sensible compromise.
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