A case of severe haemorrhagic diathesis due to acquired deficiency of factor X (both immunologically and in procoagulant activity) is presented. The clinical and serological features of this case indicated mycoplasma pneumonia1 infection. Factor X in the peripheral blood did not appear to be influenced by administration of vitamin K, prothrombin-complex concentrate, fresh plasma or fresh whole blood. Circulating inhibitors of blood coagulation were absent and systemic amyloidosis could not be demonstrated. After 20 d, factor X spontaneously returned to normal. In view of the abseince of other known causes of factor X deficiency, a possible relationship with mycoplasma pneumonia1 infection is suggested.
Hypercoagulability, known to complicate malignant disease, can be detected by the measurement of fibrinopeptide A (FPA). The aim of the present study was to establish the significance of FPA production in. patients (n = 113) with various types of malignancy, without clinical signs of DIC, venous thromboembolism, not receiving cytostatic, anticoagulant or radiotherapy or bedrest. 8 patients presented laboratory abnormalities compatible with DIC; In this group mean FPA was 9.8 ng/ml (normal 1.4±0.9.2SD) and FPA generation In vitro (ΔFPA) was 15 ng/ml/10 min (normal 0.4±0.8, 230). In the remaining 105 patients, mean FPA was 5.2 ng/ml andFPA was 1.8 ng/ml/10 min. Of the 20 patients with both normal FPA and ΔFPA, 13 were clinically in remission, 5 had malignancies without detectable metastases and only 2 showed metastases. In 2 patients FPA was normal but ΔFPA was slIghtLy accelerated. 50 patients had elevated ΔFPA but normal FPA and in 33 cases both FPA and ΔFPA were increased; in these groups the majority of patients had a metastatic malignancy In 22 patients mean FPA before (4.9 ng/ml) and 20 mln after(4.2 ng/ml) receiving heparin (7500 U, i.v.) was not significantly different. These results suggest that apart from DIC tumor cells or the adjacent inflammatory area of tumors may trigger FPA generation, not being affected by heparin. It Is postulated that “heparin resistant” FPA generation Is potentially a sensitive marker of tumor activity.
An isolated deficiency of factor X is known to occur in a hereditary form, the Stuart-Prower disease, and in an acquired form in some patients with para-proteinaemia and sporadically in systemic amyloidosis. Transient deficiency of factor X in the presence of normal levels of factors II, VII and V appears to be rare. In the literature, only three cases have been described. We have studied a patient with a severe haemorrhagic diathesis and concomitant mycoplasma pneumonial infection. The bleeding tendency proved to be due to isolated factor X deficiency. No circulating inhibitors of factor X were present. Systemic amyloidosis could not be demonstrated. Factor X-related antigen could not be detected (this test was kindly performed by Dr.Daryl S.Fair, Scripps Clinic and Research Foundation, La Jolla, U.S.A.). Treatment with vitamin K, prothrombin complex concentrate, fresh plasma and whole blood proved not to influence factor X activity in the patient’s plasma. However, 20 days after admission⋅to hospital both factor X activity and antigen spontaneously returned to normal. These results suggest that the synthesis of factor X was transiently defective. Since other conditions known to affect factor X activity could not be demonstrated, it is postulated that the acquired factor X deficiency in this patient was related to the infection with mycoplasma pneumoniae.
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