Objective To study the association between high activity of Factor II (prothrombin) in blood plasma with G20210A mutation and the development of great obstetrical syndromes. Material and methods A prospective clinical cohort study was conducted on 290 pregnant women (average age 31.7 ± 4.7 years old). The main group was made up of 140 G20210A patients, while the control group comprised 150 women with the wild G20210G type. The aim was to evaluate the activity of Factor II in the venous blood plasma during the stages of pregnancy with regard to trophoblast invasion waves. As per results, association analysis of Factor II activity value and gestational complications was carried out. Results In the control group, the median (Me) of Factor II activity ranged from 108% (preconception period) to 144% (pregnancy) [95% CI 130–150]. In patients with the GA type, the value was significantly higher in related periods, ranging from 149 to 181% [95% CI 142–195], p < 0.0001. With Factor II activity ranging from 148.5 to 180.6%, pregnancies in the main group had no complications. Higher levels of Factor II activity were associated with the development of early and/or severe preeclampsia (PE) and fetal growth retardation (FGR). Conclusion The data obtained regarding Factor II activity in blood plasma, juxtaposed with the development of great obstetrical syndromes, allow to assume that manifestation of G20210A in early and/or severe PE and FGR is associated with this coagulation factor’s level of activity. Threshold value of the Factor II activity with G20210A mutation, allowing to predict the development of PE, comprised 171.0% at the preconception stage (AUC – 0.86; p < 0.0001) and within 7–8 weeks of gestation it was 181.3% (AUC – 0.84; p < 0.0001).
This chapter presents the results of the prospective cohort study of 500 females with factor V Leiden, FVL, 1691 GA genotype, during 2008-2015. The association between FVL (regardless of its laboratory phenotype-factor Va resistance to activated protein C, APC resistance) and the development of VTEC (both outside of and during pregnancy) and gestational complications such as preeclampsia, fetal growth restriction, and miscarriage has been established. Additionally, the leading role of APC resistance degree in the clinical manifestation of FVL 1691 GA genotype as thrombotic events and pregnancy complications has been proved. Based on the data obtained, advanced approaches for the stratification of pregnant women into risk groups for the development of venous thromboembolic complications and pregnancy complications at different gestational ages adjusted for APC resistance degree are proposed. The found patterns can be useful in assessing the need for heparin prophylaxis during pregnancy from the standpoint of personalized medicine.
The objective: to study the relationship between markers of imbalance in the platelet-vascular hemostasis system and lung damage and disease outcome in patients with COVID-19.Subjects and Methods: the study included 225 patients with the confirmed diagnosis of moderate, severe and extremely severe COVID-19. In all patients, lung damage was confirmed using computed and X-ray diagnostic methods. We studied the concentration of von Willebrand factor (vWF), activity of metalloproteinase ADAMTS-13, concentration of homocysteine, endothelin-1, thrombomodulin and the number of platelets and changes in these parameters on the 1st, 3–5th and 7–10th days from the admission to the intensive care unit (ICU). In deceased patients (n = 106), lung specimens were collected to assess the nature of morphological changes.Results. It was determined that by the 7–10th days with a lethal outcome of the disease, there was a statistically significant increase in the concentration of vWF by 22.2% (p = 0.0225), the vWF/ADAMTS-13 ratio by 2 times (p = 0.0408) and decrease in the platelet count by 52% (p = 0.0008) versus the initial stage of the study. In all the deceased, the morphological picture of lung tissue damage was characterized by destruction of alveolocytes, proliferation of connective tissue, cellular infiltration, plethora of capillaries, parietal erythrocyte thrombi in the lumen of capillaries, arterioles and venules, and obstructive erythrocyte thrombi in the lumen of vessels of lung microcirculation.Conclusion. The study showed that a possible cause of thrombosis in the lumen of vessels of lung microcirculation in the case of a lethal outcome of COVID-19 might be a primary imbalance in the vascular-platelet hemostasis characterized by a significant increase in the concentration of the vWF factor, the vWF/ADAMTS-13 ratio and a decrease in the number (consumption) of platelets by the 7–10th day of the disease versus the initial stage of the study.
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