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. 2001 Feb;96(2):487-93.
doi: 10.1111/j.1572-0241.2001.03532.x.

Hemostatic imbalance in active and quiescent ulcerative colitis

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Hemostatic imbalance in active and quiescent ulcerative colitis

A A van Bodegraven et al. Am J Gastroenterol. 2001 Feb.

Abstract

Objective: In healthy conditions, factors inducing or inhibiting coagulation and factors inducing or inhibiting fibrinolysis are in balance. In ulcerative colitis, hypercoagulation is presumed, which may explain part of the clinical features of this disease. Therapy strategies affecting hemostasis may improve the course of ulcerative colitis. This study was conducted to evaluate the balance of coagulation and fibrinolysis in the course of treatment of active ulcerative colitis.

Methods: Patients with active ulcerative colitis were studied by serial determination of markers of the coagulation cascade (thrombin-antithrombin complexes and fibrin degradation products [FbDP]) and the fibrinolytic cascade (fibrinogen degradation products [FgDP]). Parameters of inflammation were also measured (C-reactive protein [CRP], erythrocyte sedimentation rate [ESR], albumin, platelet count, and fibrinogen). Disease activity was assessed by endoscopic and histopathological scores. Follow-up measurement was performed in the course of treatment at the third or fourth month after baseline. Measurements were compared with healthy controls.

Results: Thirty-three patients and 22 healthy controls were included. During active ulcerative colitis, inflammatory parameters (CRP, ESR, platelet count) and hemostatic parameters (thrombin-antithrombin complexes, fibrinogen, FgDP, and FbDP) were elevated in comparison with healthy controls. Albumin was decreased and antithrombin-III remained unchanged. During treatment, disease activity decreased significantly endoscopically and histopathologically (p < 0.001). CRP, ESR, platelet count, and fibrinogen also decreased significantly. The hemostatic balance, expressed as the ratio between the plasmin-dependent generation of FgDP and coagulation-dependent generation of FbDP, increased from 0.69 to 1.12 during treatment, mainly because of a decrease of FbDP. In healthy controls, this ratio was

Conclusions: The coagulation and fibrinolytic cascades were activated in active ulcerative colitis, with a hemostatic imbalance in favor of coagulation. This hypercoagulability persisted in 20% (7/33) of patients with ulcerative colitis in remission. The decrease of FbDP and the increase in the FgDP/FbDP ratio during reconvalescence of ulcerative colitis showed that the coagulation cascade was more activated than the fibrinolytic cascade in active disease.

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