0521779407-20 CUNY1086/Karliner 0 521 77940 7 June 4, 2007 21:22
1422 Thrombophilia
■High levels of FVIII, FIX, FXI (above the 90th percentile)
■Caval filter
■Post-thrombotic syndrome
Acquired Conditions Predisposing to Both Venous and Arterial Throm-
bosis
■Hyperhomocysteinemia
■Paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria
■Antiphospholipid antibodies (anticardiolipin antibodies, lupus anti-
coagulant)
■Myeloproliferative diseases
■Heparin-induced thrombocytopenia
■Tobacco use
■Vasculitis
Acquired Conditions Predisposing only to Arterial Thrombosis
■Hyperlipidemia
Factor V Leiden
■Caused by a point mutation in the factor V gene, leading to change
at the major Protein C cleavage site (FV R506Q)
■Frequency varies from 1% to 8%. Found mainly in Caucasians.
■Found in 20–50% of patients with venous thrombosis
■Relative risk for thrombosis is 5-fold in heterozygous patients.
■Relative risk for thrombosis is 50-fold in homozygotes.
■Oral contraceptives increase risk in heterozygous patients by
48-fold.
Prothrombin Mutation
■Caused by a point mutation in the 3′untranslated region of the pro-
thrombin gene (G20210A)
■Leads to increased levels of prothrombin
■Frequency varies from 0.7–4.0%.
■Found in 6–20% of patients with venous thrombosis
■Relative risk for thrombosis is 2.5.
Protein C Deficiency
■Frequency estimated to be 0.2%
■Found in 3% of patients with venous thrombosis
■Homozygotes develop neonatal purpura fulminans, cerebral vein
thrombosis.
■Heterozygotes have 10-fold increased relative risk for venous throm-
bosis and increased risk of developing warfarin skin necrosis.