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1 with hemophilia who have antibodies to human clotting factor.
2 the development of neutralizing Ab's to the clotting factor.
3 ic delivery of proteins such as hormones and clotting factors.
4 d some mice developed autoantibodies against clotting factors.
5 of therapeutic proteins such as hormones and clotting factors.
6 es blood products such as factor VIII and IX clotting factors.
7 oteins, including CR/regulatory proteins and clotting factors.
8 ion of a small number of proteins, including clotting factors.
9 nerals, and synthesizing plasma proteins and clotting factors.
10 r kallikrein-related peptidases, and several clotting factors.
11 f decreased levels of gamma-carboxylated VKD clotting factors.
12 cycle, activating vitamin K-dependent blood clotting factors.
13 lational modification of vitamin K-dependent clotting factors.
14 for the gamma-glutamyl carboxylation of many clotting factors.
15 understanding and engineering of artificial clotting factors.
16 cycle, phase I and II metabolic enzymes, and clotting factors.
17 hage, soft clot dissolution, and dilution of clotting factors.
18 evelopment through complex interactions with clotting factors.
19 oteins, blood pressure, glycemic status, and clotting factors.
20 nce of thrombin in combination with cellular clotting factors.
21 een porcine coagulation proteins and primate clotting factors.
22 ontact with the maternal circulation and its clotting factors.
23 e find that murine deficiency of prothrombin clotting factor 2 (Cf2) was associated with the death of
24 venously administered procoagulant PL caused clotting factor activation and depletion, induced a blee
26 ble and persistent expression of circulating clotting factor activity, associated with decreased clin
27 ween 2000 and 2010 and collected data on all clotting-factor administration for up to 75 exposure day
28 bleeding with adequately sustained levels of clotting factor, after a single therapeutic intervention
31 inding to thrombin and are relevant to other clotting factors and enzymes allosterically activated by
32 patients who develop inhibitors to deficient clotting factors and in whom bypassing agents are requir
33 mapheresis was utilized to replace deficient clotting factors and mitigate the inflammatory response.
35 s (LSECs), hepatocytes, scavenger receptors, clotting factors, and immunoglobulins were analyzed.
36 C virus treatment response, plasma levels of clotting factors, and late-onset Alzheimer disease, has
37 e inhibition of thrombin and other activated clotting factors, antithrombin may also down-regulate th
39 er, but it does not disrupt hemostasis until clotting factors are completely depleted, at an 8-fold h
40 at EC surface expression of TF and extrinsic clotting factors are critical in augmenting capillary le
41 port that sustained endogenous production of clotting factor as a result of gene therapy eliminates t
45 n their outer membrane leaflet and activated clotting factors assemble into enzymatically active comp
47 itory antibodies, replacement of the missing clotting factor by infusion of factor VIII becomes less
49 atients with AH, which included hepatokines, clotting factors, complement cascade components, and hep
51 nhibitors and with documented treatment with clotting factor concentrate in the 24 weeks before scree
52 p 4 contained patients who received previous clotting factor concentrate prophylaxis or on-demand tre
54 alised bleeding rate compared with on-demand clotting factor concentrates and no bleeding events in a
55 th inherited bleeding disorders who received clotting factor concentrates before 1987 have high rates
56 axis once per month or to continue on-demand clotting factor concentrates for a total of 9 months.
57 nts in haemophilia care, the availability of clotting factor concentrates for all affected individual
58 (3.1 [95% CI 2.3-4.3]) than in the on-demand clotting factor concentrates group (31.0 [21.1-45.5]; ra
59 and five (13%) participants in the on-demand clotting factor concentrates group (gastroenteritis, pne
65 atment mainly consists of the transfusion of clotting factor concentrates prepared from human blood o
66 increasing risk of HCV, particularly before clotting factor concentrates were licensed in the 1970s.
69 odeficiency virus, and viral inactivation of clotting factor concentrates, were needed to reduce tran
70 o had previously been treated on-demand with clotting factor concentrates, were randomly assigned in
73 cute bleeding consists of the transfusion of clotting-factor concentrates prepared from human blood a
74 and from blood products (factor VIII and IX clotting-factor concentrates, immunoglobulin preparation
75 due to eoxPL deficiency, instead activating clotting factor consumption and depletion in the circula
76 ave general relevance to vitamin K-dependent clotting factors containing epidermal growth factor doma
77 ormation may occur in the treatment of other clotting factor deficiencies (eg, against von Willebrand
78 es arise when a patient who has a congenital clotting factor deficiency is infused with a blood produ
79 VKOR variants can cause vitamin K-dependent clotting factor deficiency or alter warfarin response.
80 nsfusion of blood products in the setting of clotting factor deficiency or inhibition, platelet defic
81 f platelets, has the advantage of delivering clotting factors directly to the site of an injury, wher
82 ubstituting for the procoagulant function of clotting factors (eg, emicizumab) or targeting the natur
83 treatment relies on replacement therapy with clotting factors, either at the time of bleeding (ie, on
90 he binding of bacteria to ECM components and clotting factors (fibronectin and fibrinogen, respective
91 emostasis and the development of recombinant clotting factors for the treatment of the common inherit
92 ther vertebrates, even though genes for some clotting factors found in mammals are absent and some ot
93 lotting factor, promote rapid clearance of a clotting factor from the blood, or alter the clotting fa
98 eceive no prophylaxis and continue on-demand clotting factor (group 1) or concizumab prophylaxis (gro
100 redicted that restoring the normal levels of clotting factors II, IX, and X while simultaneously rest
101 g coagulopathy by depleting a tumor-produced clotting factor improves survival of tumor-bearing flies
102 clotting factor from the blood, or alter the clotting factor in such a way that the protein-antibody
104 ustained expression of therapeutic levels of clotting factors in small animals, and some of these str
105 Factor XIII and fibrinogen are unusual among clotting factors in that neither is a serine protease.
106 velopment, and conservation of virtually all clotting factors in the zebrafish genomic sequence.
109 Acidosis impaired coagulation by depleting clotting factors, inhibiting thrombin generation, and af
111 the potential to maintain therapeutic blood clotting factor IX (FIX) levels in patients with hemophi
113 l fully gamma-carboxylated recombinant human clotting factor IX (r-hFIX), cell lines stably overexpre
114 tion of mice with AAV vectors encoding human clotting factor IX after gamma-irradiation resulted in s
116 resulted in synthesis of low levels of human clotting factor IX for the 5-month period of observation
118 a structure identical to that found on human clotting factor IX: Sia-alpha2,3-Gal-beta1, 4-GlcNAc-bet
123 ypes of human ECs in primary culture produce clotting factors necessary for FX activation via the int
126 erally associated with deficiencies of other clotting factors, our findings demonstrate the primary r
127 uctase, cellular responses including altered clotting factor processing and coagulopathy, organ level
128 ell lines overexpressing vitamin K-dependent clotting factors produce only a fraction of the recombin
129 hese antibodies may neutralize function of a clotting factor, promote rapid clearance of a clotting f
130 idrug antibodies (ADAs) may form against the clotting factor protein drugs used in replacement therap
132 ibodies that inhibit the function of infused clotting factor remains a major challenge and is conside
133 lotting factor VIII (FVIII) DNA would ensure clotting factor replacement at constant circulating leve
135 HA consists of preventing joint bleeding by clotting factor replacement, and in extreme cases, ortho
136 for hemophilia treatment that do not rely on clotting factor replacement, but imply the neutralizatio
138 ticularly strategies to prolong half-life of clotting factor replacements, the management of inhibito
139 peptide sequences of the vitamin K-dependent clotting factors serve as a recognition site for the enz
144 es prepared from human blood and recombinant clotting factors that are currently in clinical trials.
146 II (FVIII) is a major obstacle in using this clotting factor to treat individuals with hemophilia A.
149 no-associated viral (AAV) vectors delivering clotting factor transgenes into hepatocytes has shown mu
150 n, coagulopathy types and severity, types of clotting factor treatment, and sex were not associated w
151 is known to cause combined deficiency of VKD clotting factors type 2 (VKCFD2), a disease phenotype re
155 tithrombotic on the basis of inactivation of clotting factors Va and VIIIa; (2) a cytoprotective on t
157 e cellular receptor for an activated form of clotting factor VII (VIIa) and the binding of factor VII
158 (gamma-carboxyglutamic acid domain) of blood clotting factor VII was carried out to identify sites th
161 sue factor (TF) is the cellular receptor for clotting factor VIIa (FVIIa), and the formation of TF-FV
167 philia A is a monogenic disease with a blood clotting factor VIII (FVIII) deficiency caused by mutati
168 ophilia, as continuous expression of donated clotting factor VIII (FVIII) DNA would ensure clotting f
169 ed disorders caused by lack or deficiency of clotting factor VIII (FVIII) or IX (FIX), respectively.
170 epatocytes to express B domain deleted (BDD) clotting factor VIII (FVIII) to permit viral encapsidati
174 ent 1+2, and soluble P-selectin and also for clotting factor VIII and the thrombin generation potenti
175 from 133 plant species eliminated 105 (human clotting factor VIII heavy chain [FVIII HC]) and 59 (pol
176 VWF also is a carrier protein for blood clotting factor VIII, and this interaction is required f
177 compared comprehensively the bone health of clotting factor VIII, factor IX, and Von Willebrand Fact
178 expression of a misfolding-prone human blood clotting factor VIII, or after partial hepatectomy.
180 ing disorders resulting from deficiencies in clotting factors VIII (haemophilia A) and IX (haemophili
182 t involves frequent intravenous infusions of clotting factors, which is associated with variable hemo
183 n thrombocytopenia and low concentrations of clotting factors, which may cause profuse hemorrhagic co
185 the binding interactions of seven different clotting factors with GLA domains that have never been s
186 ers of Kupffer cells and LSECs, the level of clotting factor X, and hepatocyte infectibility did not
190 oxaban, a direct oral inhibitor of activated clotting factor Xa, might be more suitable than conventi
193 Taken together, these data (i) confirm that clotting factor XII functions as a mitogenic growth fact
194 lently linked to fibrin when activated blood clotting factor XIII (FXIIIa) catalyzes the formation of