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Dysfunctional fibrinolysis and cerebral venous thrombosis.

Cerebral venous thrombosis (CVT) is an uncommon neurological disease with high morbidity and mortality. Even after extensive thrombophilia screening, majority of the thrombosis cases remain with unknown etiology. Hypofibrinolysis due to acquired or congenital deficiencies or abnormalities in factors in the fibrinolytic cascade is a known cause of thrombosis at any site. In the present study 104 cases of radiologically confirmed CVT cases were investigated for the conventional thrombophilia along with factors in the fibrinolytic cascade to find a possible etiology for the clinical manifestation. Conventional thrombophilia markers which included PC, PS, AT and FVL mutation were detected in 16.3% of the patients. Approximately 19% cases had grossly elevated plasma PAI-1 levels. PAI-1 4G/4G genotype was found to be strongly associated with high PAI-1 levels. 2.9% cases had reduced tPA levels, 1.9% had plasminogen deficiency and 1.9% cases had increased alpha-2-antiplasmin levels. Along with conventional thrombophilia, dysfunctional fibrinolysis is found to be strongly associated with CVT. Understanding the role of risk factors is important for appropriate treatment of this serious disorder.

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