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These infants often have protein C deficiency as well.
This disease has similar symptoms to protein C deficiency.
The prevalence of protein C deficiency has been estimated to about 0.2% to 0.5% of the general population.
Homozygous protein C deficiency and the consequent serious health effects were described in 1984 by several scientists.
Liver transplant may be considered curative for homozygous protein C deficiency.
Protein C deficiency is a rare genetic trait that predisposes to thrombotic disease.
The majority of people with protein C deficiency lack only one of the functioning genes, and are therefore heterozygous.
Patients with Protein C deficiency are at an increased risk of developing skin necrosis while on warfarin.
Studies have demonstrated an increased risk of recurrent venous thromboembolic events in patients with protein C deficiency.
In 1982, a family study by Griffin et al. first associated protein C deficiency with symptoms of venous thrombosis.
There are two main types of protein C mutations that lead to protein C deficiency:
Protein S deficiency can be affected in the same way as protein C deficiency is affected.
A genetic protein C deficiency, in its mild form associated with simple heterozygosity, causes a significantly increased risk of venous thrombosis in adults.
Protein C deficiency is associated with an increased incidence of venous thromboembolism (relative risk 8-10), whereas no association with arterial thrombotic disease has been found.
Warfarin necrosis is an acquired protein C deficiency due to treatment with warfarin, which is a vitamin K antagonist and an anticoagulant itself.
The main ones are antithrombin III deficiency, protein C deficiency and protein S deficiency.
Protein C deficiency may cause purpura fulminans, a severe clotting disorder in the newborn that leads to both tissue death and bleeding into the skin and other organs.
Protein C deficiency followed in 1981, when described by researchers from the Scripps Research Institute and the U.S. Centers of Disease Control.
Since the clot-promoting effects of coumarins are transitory, patients with protein C deficiency or previous warfarin necrosis can still be restarted on these drugs if appropriate measures are taken.
Before 1999, only sixteen cases of homozygous protein C deficiency had been described (two abnormal copies of the gene, leading to absence of functioning protein C in the bloodstream).
Genetic thrombophilia (factor V Leiden, prothrombin mutation G20210A, protein C deficiency, protein S deficiency, antithrombin deficiency, hyperhomocysteinemia and plasminogen/fibrinolysis disorders)
In these situations, warfarin may be restarted at a low dosage to ensure that the protein C deficiency does not present before the vitamin K coagulation factors II, IX and X are suppressed.
Examples of genetic tendencies include Protein C deficiency, Protein S deficiency, the Factor V Leiden mutation, Hereditary anti-thrombin deficiency and Prothrombin Mutation G20210A.
Florman SS, Fishbein TM, Schiano T, Letizia A, Fennelly E, DeSancho M. Multivisceral transplantation for portal hypertension and diffuse mesenteric thrombosis caused by protein C deficiency.
About 60% of people who are deficient in antithrombin will have experienced thrombosis at least once by age 60, as will about 50% of people with protein C deficiency and about a third of those with protein S deficiency.