- Lupus anticoagulant
Infobox_Disease
Name = PAGENAME
Caption =
DiseasesDB = 775
ICD10 =
ICD9 = ICD9|289.81
ICDO =
OMIM =
MedlinePlus =
eMedicineSubj =
eMedicineTopic =
MeshID = D016682Lupus anticoagulant (also known as lupus antibody, LA, or lupus inhibitors) is a medical phenomenon where autoantibodies bind to
phospholipid s andprotein s associated with the cell membrane. Since interactions between the cell membrane andclotting factor s are necessary for proper functioning of thecoagulation cascade , the lupus anticoagulant can interfere with blood clotting as well asin-vitro tests of clotting function. Paradoxically, lupus anticoagulants are also risk factors forthrombosis .The name "lupus anticoagulant" is a misnomer. Most patients with a lupus anticoagulant do not actually have
lupus erythematosus , and only a small proportion will proceed to develop this disease (which causes joint pains, skin problems and renal failure, amongst other complications). Patients withlupus erythematosus are more likely to develop a lupus anticoagulant than the general population.Conceptually, lupus anticoagulants overlap with the
antiphospholipid antibody syndrome . Lupus anticoagulants can be understood as the tendency ofantiphospholipid antibodies to prolong the clotting times, especially in phospholipid rich clotting testing such as thedilute Russell's viper venom time .Often, the lupus anticoagulant is diagnosed on asymptomatic patients by a routine blood testing prior to surgery. Patients with a lupus anticoagulant are prone to
thrombosis , excess bleeding, andhabitual abortion (repeated miscarriages).Workup
The presence of prolonged clotting times on a routine plasma test often triggers functional testing of the blood clotting function, as well as
serological testing to identify common autoantibodies such asantiphospholipid antibodies . These antibodies tend to delayin-vitro coagulation in phospholipid-dependent laboratory tests such as thepartial thromboplastin time .The initial workup of a prolonged PTT is a
mixing test whereby the patient's plasma is mixed with normal pooled plasma and the clotting is re-assessed. If a clotting inhibitor such as a lupus anticoagulant is present, the inhibitor will interact with the normal pooled plasma and the clotting time will remain abnormal. However, if the clotting time of the mixed plasma corrects towards normal, the diagnosis of an inhibitor such as the lupus anticoagulant is excluded; the diagnosis is a deficient clotting factor that is replenished by the normal plasma.If the mixing test indicates an inhibitor, diagnosis of a lupus anticoagulant is then confirmed with
phospholipid -sensitive functional clotting testing, such as thedilute Russell's viper venom time , or theKaolin clotting time . Excess phospholipid will eventually correct the prolongation of these prolonged clotting tests (conceptually known as "phospholipid neutralization" in the clinical coagulation laboratory), confirming the diagnosis of a lupus anticoagulant.Treatment
Treatment for a lupus anticoagulant is usually undertaken in the context of documented
thrombosis , such as extremity phlebitis or dural sinus vein thrombosis. Patients with a well-documented (i.e., present at least twice) lupus anticoagulant and a history ofthrombosis should be considered candidates for indefinite treatment withanticoagulants . Patients with no history ofthrombosis and a lupus anticoagulant should probably be observed. Current evidence suggests that the risk of recurrentthrombosis in patients with anantiphospholipid antibody is enhanced whether that antibody is measured on serological testing or functional testing. TheSapporo criteria specify that both serological and functional tests must be positive to diagnose theantiphospholipid antibody syndrome .cite journal | author = Viard JP, Amoura Z, Bach JF | title = [Anti-beta 2 glycoprotein I antibodies in systemic lupus erythematosus: a marker of thrombosis associated with a circulating anticoagulant] | language = French | journal = C. R. Acad. Sci. III, Sci. Vie | volume = 313 | issue = 13 | pages = 607–12 | year = 1991 | pmid = 1782567 | doi = ] .Miscarriages may be more prevalent in patients with a lupus anticoagulant. These can be prevented with the administration of
low molecular weight heparin s (LMWHs), and thrombosis is treated withanticoagulant s (LMWHs andwarfarin ). [cite journal |author=Dolitzky M, Inbal A, Segal Y, Weiss A, Brenner B, Carp H |title=A randomized study of thromboprophylaxis in women with unexplained consecutive recurrent miscarriages |journal=Fertil Steril |volume=86 |issue=2 |pages=362–6 |year=2006 |pmid=16769056 |doi=10.1016/j.fertnstert.2005.12.068]References
External links
* [http://www.labtestsonline.org/understanding/analytes/lupus_anticoagulant/test.html Information on lupus anticoagulant from the American Association for Clinical Chemistry]
*
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.