Terminology Service for NFDI4Health

Resistance to activated protein C

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Poor anticoagulant response to activated protein C. A plasma is termed 'APC resistant' when the addition of exogenous APC fails to prolong its clotting time in an activated partial thromboplastin time assay. [ http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/14976057 ]

Term info

Label

Resistance to activated protein C

Synonyms
  • Activated protein C resistance
database cross reference
comment

The protein C pathway is a major anticoagulant mechanism that down-regulates the prothrombin- and intrinsic factor X (FX)-activating complexes via inactivation of their respective cofactors, activated factors V (FVa) and VIII (FVIIIa). Cofactor inactivation occurs by limited proteolysis at certain amino acid positions in FVa and in FVIIIa. These reactions are catalyzed by the serine protease activated protein C (APC) and stimulated by the APC cofactor protein S. Functional defects of the protein C pathway determine a plasma phenotype known as APC resistance, which is a prevalent and important risk factor for venous thrombosis. A plasma is termed 'APC resistant' when the addition of exogenous APC fails to prolong its clotting time in an activated partial thromboplastin time (aPTT) assay.

created by

peter

creation date

2013-02-23T09:54:07Z

has obo namespace

human_phenotype

id

HP:0012175