Oral anticoagulation reduces activated protein C less than protein C and other vitamin K-dependent clotting factors |
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Authors: | Simmelink Marleen J A de Groot Philip G Derksen Ronald H W M Fernandez José A Griffin John H |
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Affiliation: | Thrombosis and Haemostasis Laboratory, Department of Haematology, and Department of Rheumatology & Clinical Immunology, University Medical Center, Utrecht, The Netherlands. m.simmelink@lab.azu.nl |
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Abstract: | Oral anticoagulant therapy, which is used for prophylaxis and management of thrombotic disorders, causes similar reductions in plasma levels of vitamin K-dependent procoagulant and anticoagulant clotting factor zymogens. When we measured levels of circulating activated protein C, a physiologically important anticoagulant and anti-inflammatory agent, in patients on oral anticoagulant therapy, the results unexpectedly showed that such therapy decreases levels of activated protein C substantially less than levels of protein C, prothrombin, and factor X, especially at lower levels of prothrombin and factor X. Thus, we suggest that oral anticoagulant therapy results in a relatively increased expression of the protein C pathway compared with procoagulant pathways not only because there is less prothrombin to inhibit activated protein C anticoagulant activity, but also because there is a disproportionately higher level of circulating activated protein C. |
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