ISSN:
1432-1440
Schlagwort(e):
Lupus anticoagulant
;
Paraproteinemia
;
Systemic lupus erythematosus
;
Multiple myeloma
;
Lymphoproliferative diseases
;
Lymphoma
Quelle:
Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
Thema:
Medizin
Notizen:
Summary The clinical and laboratory findings in seven female patients with primary autoimmune diseases, one female patient with lymphoplasmacytoid (LP) immunocytoma and IgM paraproteinemia, and two male patients with multiple myeloma are described. The common denominator in all patients was a lupus anticoagulant or a closely related coagulation disorder. Recurrent thrombosis was observed in six patients with autoimmune diseases and in two patients with malignant monoclonal gammopathies. Other clinical manifestations included cerebral disorders (four patients with autoimmune disease/two patients with monoclonal gammopathy), repeated obstetric complications (6/1), asymptomatic valvular heart disease (6/1), renal dysfunction (6/2), hepatic involvement (2/2), and arthropathy (2/0). Laboratory investigations revealed a biologic false-positive serological test for syphilis in six patients with autoimmune disease and one with monoclonal gammopathy, antinuclear antibodies (4/0), antibodies against DNA (4/1), and a positive direct Coombs test (3/1) which was accompanied by hemolytic anemia in two patients (1/1). Additionally slight leucocytopenia (2/1) and thrombocytopenia (6/2) were observed; abnormal bleeding was only seen in one patient with severe thrombocytopenia. Other complications characteristic of LP immunocytoma or multiple myeloma were missing. The obvious similarities between the patients with autoimmune diseases and the patients with malignant monoclonal gammopathies suggest analogous pathogenetic mechanisms. Since the clinical syndrome associated with the lupus anticoagulant in patients with autoimmune disorders has been proposed to arise from the action of autoantibodies against phospholipids, it is attractive to hypothesize that the findings in the patients with malignant diseases were caused by an autoantibody activity of the monoclonal immunoglobulin. This assumption is substantiated by the observation that in one patient the paraprotein level correlated with the prolongation of the coagulation times and the severeness of the clinical perturbations. Although paraproteins mimicking the laboratory alterations of the lupus anticoagulant have been reported before, the corresponding clinical features have not yet been described in malignant monoclonal gammopathies. The syndrome may be juxtaposed to other systemic disorders complicating paraproteinemias, and is possibly more frequent than is as yet known.
Materialart:
Digitale Medien
URL:
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF01737004
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