Alpha 2-antiplasmin deficiency in a Sudanese child: a case report

Abstract Background The plasma serine protease inhibitor alpha 2-antiplasmin (α2-AP, otherwise known as α2-plasmin inhibitor) is a rapid-acting plasmin inhibitor recently found in human plasma, which seems to have a significant role in the regulation of in vivo fibrinolysis. Congenital deficiency of...

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Main Author: Bashir Abdrhman Bashir Mohammed
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-05-01
Series:Journal of Medical Case Reports
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s13256-021-02813-6
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spelling doaj-cedede2994b44842a56c6058abdc71372021-05-09T11:16:50ZengBMCJournal of Medical Case Reports1752-19472021-05-011511510.1186/s13256-021-02813-6Alpha 2-antiplasmin deficiency in a Sudanese child: a case reportBashir Abdrhman Bashir Mohammed0Hematology Department, Faculty of Medical Laboratory Sciences, Port Sudan Ahlia CollegeAbstract Background The plasma serine protease inhibitor alpha 2-antiplasmin (α2-AP, otherwise known as α2-plasmin inhibitor) is a rapid-acting plasmin inhibitor recently found in human plasma, which seems to have a significant role in the regulation of in vivo fibrinolysis. Congenital deficiency of α2-AP is extremely uncommon. Case presentation We report here a case of absolute deficiency of α2-AP in an 11-year-old Sudanese boy, who had a lifelong intermittent hemorrhagic tendency (gum bleeding, epistaxis, and exaggerated bleeding after trauma). Coagulation tests including prothrombin time, partial thromboplastin time, thrombin time, bleeding time, platelet count, clot retraction test, antithrombin, and factor VIII levels were within normal limits. Hepatic function tests and complete blood count were also normal. The main interesting finding in this patient was that the whole blood clot lysis was extremely fast, completed within 5–8 hours. The second abnormal finding is that the euglobulin clot lysis time was short. Nevertheless, the concentration of α2-AP in the patient's plasma was 0.2 IU/ml (reference range is 0.80–1.20 IU/ml). The addition of pooled plasma (with normal α2-AP) to the patient's whole blood corrected the accelerated fibrinolysis. Conclusion The study showed that α2-AP deficiency resulted in uninhibited fibrinolysis that caused the hemorrhagic tendency in this patient. Thus, this report demonstrates the significant role of α2-AP in coagulation.https://doi.org/10.1186/s13256-021-02813-6Alpha 2-antiplasmin (α2-AP)FibrinolysisBleeding tendencySudan
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Bashir Abdrhman Bashir Mohammed
spellingShingle Bashir Abdrhman Bashir Mohammed
Alpha 2-antiplasmin deficiency in a Sudanese child: a case report
Journal of Medical Case Reports
Alpha 2-antiplasmin (α2-AP)
Fibrinolysis
Bleeding tendency
Sudan
author_facet Bashir Abdrhman Bashir Mohammed
author_sort Bashir Abdrhman Bashir Mohammed
title Alpha 2-antiplasmin deficiency in a Sudanese child: a case report
title_short Alpha 2-antiplasmin deficiency in a Sudanese child: a case report
title_full Alpha 2-antiplasmin deficiency in a Sudanese child: a case report
title_fullStr Alpha 2-antiplasmin deficiency in a Sudanese child: a case report
title_full_unstemmed Alpha 2-antiplasmin deficiency in a Sudanese child: a case report
title_sort alpha 2-antiplasmin deficiency in a sudanese child: a case report
publisher BMC
series Journal of Medical Case Reports
issn 1752-1947
publishDate 2021-05-01
description Abstract Background The plasma serine protease inhibitor alpha 2-antiplasmin (α2-AP, otherwise known as α2-plasmin inhibitor) is a rapid-acting plasmin inhibitor recently found in human plasma, which seems to have a significant role in the regulation of in vivo fibrinolysis. Congenital deficiency of α2-AP is extremely uncommon. Case presentation We report here a case of absolute deficiency of α2-AP in an 11-year-old Sudanese boy, who had a lifelong intermittent hemorrhagic tendency (gum bleeding, epistaxis, and exaggerated bleeding after trauma). Coagulation tests including prothrombin time, partial thromboplastin time, thrombin time, bleeding time, platelet count, clot retraction test, antithrombin, and factor VIII levels were within normal limits. Hepatic function tests and complete blood count were also normal. The main interesting finding in this patient was that the whole blood clot lysis was extremely fast, completed within 5–8 hours. The second abnormal finding is that the euglobulin clot lysis time was short. Nevertheless, the concentration of α2-AP in the patient's plasma was 0.2 IU/ml (reference range is 0.80–1.20 IU/ml). The addition of pooled plasma (with normal α2-AP) to the patient's whole blood corrected the accelerated fibrinolysis. Conclusion The study showed that α2-AP deficiency resulted in uninhibited fibrinolysis that caused the hemorrhagic tendency in this patient. Thus, this report demonstrates the significant role of α2-AP in coagulation.
topic Alpha 2-antiplasmin (α2-AP)
Fibrinolysis
Bleeding tendency
Sudan
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s13256-021-02813-6
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