159 results on '"G. P. McNicol"'
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2. A Comparison of the Effects of Oestriol Succinate and Ethinyl Oestradiol on Blood Coagulation, Platelet Function and Fibrinolysis in Post-Menopausal Women
- Author
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G. Fieldhouse, B. E. C. Nordin, T. Davies, G. P. McNicol, and J. C. Gallagher
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Endocrinology ,Ethinyl oestradiol ,Coagulation ,business.industry ,Internal medicine ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Fibrinolysis ,Medicine ,Platelet ,Post menopausal ,business - Published
- 2015
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3. 44. FIBRINOGEN DEGRADATION PRODUCTS (F.D.P.) IN RENAL DISEASE: Estimation and Significance of F.D.P. in Urine
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C.R.M. Prentice, J.D. Briggs, G. P. McNicol, and Christine Pidgeon
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Pregnancy ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pathology ,business.industry ,Hematology ,Disease ,Urine ,medicine.disease ,Fibrinogen ,Gastroenterology ,Antigen ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,business ,medicine.drug - Published
- 2009
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4. HAEMOSTATIC MECHANISMS IN MATERNAL, UMBILICAL VEIN AND UMBILICAL ARTERY BLOOD AT THE TIME OF DELIVERY
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J. K. Clayton, G. P. Mcnicol, and M. E. Foley
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Blood Platelets ,Umbilical Veins ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Platelet Aggregation ,Placenta ,Umbilical Arteries ,Umbilical vein ,Pregnancy ,Internal medicine ,medicine.artery ,medicine ,Humans ,Platelet ,Vein ,Blood Coagulation ,Fetus ,Obstetrics ,business.industry ,Fibrinolysis ,Infant, Newborn ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Umbilical artery ,Fetal Blood ,Peripheral ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Cardiology ,Female ,business ,Artery - Abstract
Summary Studies of the haemostatic mechanism were made on paired samples from the umbilical vein and artery and from a maternal peripheral vein immediately following delivery in 80 healthy patients with uncomplicated pregnancies. Neonatal blood showed a significant decrease in clotting ‘activity’ and platelet function, and a significant increase in fibrinolytic activity. The umbilical vein, in comparison to the umbilical artery, showed increased clotting ‘activity’, increased platelet function and decreased fibrinolytic activity. The possible adverse influence of the placenta on haemostasis in the fetus and newborn is discussed.
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- 1977
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5. 6-oxo-Prostaglandin F1α and Thromboxane B2 in Uterine Vein Blood - A Possible Role in Menstrual Bleeding
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J K Clayton, J A Salmon, S Moncada, G P McNicol, C F Goodfellow, R.C. Paton, and J A Davies
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Alpha (ethology) ,Prostaglandin ,Prostacyclin ,Hematology ,Venous blood ,Thromboxane B2 ,Thromboxane A2 ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Endocrinology ,chemistry ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Platelet ,Vein ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The role of the haemostatic system in relation to menstrual bleeding is poorly understood. Platelet retention to glass beads and plasma concentrations of 6-oxo-PGF1 alpha and thromboxane B2 were measured in uterine and peripheral venous blood obtained from 18 women undergoing abdominal hysterectomy. Concentrations of 6-oxo-PGF1 alpha were significantly (p less than 0.01) higher in uterine (1.4 +/- 0.3 ng/ml, mean +/- SEM) than in peripheral vein blood (0.2 +/- 0.1 ng/ml) as was the level of thromboxane B2 (0.5 +/- 0.1 and 0.2 +/- 0.1 ng/ml, respectively). Platelet retention in uterine vein blood (11 +/- 4%) was significantly lower than in peripheral blood (42 +/- 4%; p less than 0.01) and the degree of platelet retention correlated inversely with the plasma concentration of 6-oxo-PGF1 alpha (r -0.43; p less than 0.01). There was a significant rank correlation between time since menstruation and concentrations of 6-oxo-PGF1 alpha in uterine (tau + 0.69; p less than 0.001) and peripheral (tau + 0.56; p less than 0.05) vein blood. The results indicate that an increased local production of prostacyclin (PGI2) relative to thromboxane A2 at the time of menstruation could contribute to the mechanism of uterine bleeding.
- Published
- 1982
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6. The Effects of an Increase in Endogenous Oestrogen on the Haemostatic Mechanism
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K. W. Hancock, G. P. Mcnicol, J. A. Davies, and J. L. Toy
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Infertility ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Endocrinology ,Mechanism (biology) ,business.industry ,Internal medicine ,Pituitary hormones ,medicine ,Endogeny ,Hematology ,skin and connective tissue diseases ,medicine.disease ,business - Abstract
SummaryThe effects on the haemostatic mechanism of rises in circulating human oestrogen in a group of women being treated for infertility with pituitary hormones were studied. Despite large but brief rises in oestrogen levels no changes were found.
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- 1978
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7. The Influence of a Combined Oral Contraceptive Pill and Menstrual Cycle Phase on Digital Microvascular Haemodynamics
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H. Tindall, G. P. McNicol, and J. E. Tooke
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Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Oral contraceptive pill ,media_common.quotation_subject ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Physiology ,Hemodynamics ,Blood Pressure ,Fingers ,Menstruation ,Humans ,Medicine ,Menstrual cycle ,media_common ,Gynecology ,business.industry ,Microcirculation ,General Medicine ,Blood flow ,Capillaries ,Menstrual cycle phase ,Contraceptives, Oral, Combined ,Blood pressure ,Female ,Combined oral contraceptive pill ,Skin Temperature ,business ,Contraceptives, Oral - Abstract
1. Nailfold capillary pressure, digital blood flow and skin temperature have been measured on days 7, 14, 21 and 28 of the menstrual cycle in 10 women on a combined oral contraceptive pill and 10 control subjects with normal menstrual cycles. 2. Capillary pressure and digital blood flow were statistically significantly higher in the group taking an oral contraceptive pill compared with control subjects. 3. Capillary pressure values for women failed to show the same positive correlation with skin temperature previously described in normal men. 4. The results are interpreted as evidence for a powerful modulating influence of sex steroids on digital microvascular haemodynamics.
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- 1981
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8. Defective Fibrinolysis in Venous Thrombosis
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A. J. Crandon, G. P. McNicol, and J. A. Davies
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Venous thrombosis ,business.industry ,Internal medicine ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Fibrinolysis ,Cardiology ,medicine ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,business - Abstract
In previous studies a variety of attempts have been made to define laboratory tests which could predict patients who would develop deep vein thrombosis post-operatively. Such tests included the partial thromboplastin time, haematocrit and platelet adhesiveness. In this study patients undergoing gynaecological surgery were screened in advance with a panel of clinical measurements and laboratory tests and the development of DVT was noted using 125I-fibrinogen leg scanning. The values for the selected variables were analysed using logistic discrimination. The factors with the greatest prediction were the euglobulin lysis time, age, varicose veins, serum FR-antigen and percentage overweight for height. When this formula was applied to a further group of patients it allowed a ‘high risk’ group to be defined and these were given low-dose heparin with a significant reduction in the incidence of post-operative DVT. An unexpected finding was that patients who smoked cigarettes appeared to be protected from post-operative DVT.
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- 1981
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9. A rather sad document
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G P McNicol
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medicine.medical_specialty ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Population ,Awards and Prizes ,Private Practice ,Commission ,State Medicine ,Revelation ,Medical Staff, Hospital ,Humans ,Medicine ,Health Workforce ,Foreign Medical Graduates ,education ,Quality of Health Care ,General Environmental Science ,media_common ,Favourite ,education.field_of_study ,Medical education ,Career Choice ,business.industry ,Research ,Public health ,General Engineering ,General Medicine ,Magic (paranormal) ,United Kingdom ,Education, Medical, Graduate ,Private practice ,Law ,Verdict ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,business ,Research Article ,Education, Medical, Undergraduate - Abstract
"the only category of caring staff essential when active treatment is no longer possible." However eirenic, the commissioners are not afraid to speak their minds. On fluoridation they are "certain that it is entirely wrong to deprive the most vulnerable section of the population of such an important public health measure for the sake of the views of a small minority of adults for whom its benefits come too late." They do not mince matters concerning the quality of, for example, recruitment into psychiatry, services for the mentally handicapped, and some urban primary care, where "the National Health Service is failing dismally." They recognise the less than altruistic pressure of pharmaceutical companies on GPs and make no bones about drawing up a limited list of drugs, eliminating "ineffective and unnecessarily expensive drugs." Depending on your point of view, you will accept or reject the report in part or in whole. Of course, it will be a disappoint ment to those whose favourite remedies have not been exhibited or who, unrealistically, expected the heavens to open and the NHS to be transformed by "some blinding revelation." The commission is well aware that "there are no magic wands to be waved." If accused of some complacency in their verdict that "we need not feel ashamed of our health service," which "is not suffering from a mortal disease," they could argue that their lofty view enables them to see the wood unimpeded by trees. Those of us working down among the roots may not be quite so sanguine. For me, however, the importance of the report lies in its perspective "overview," presumably free from sectional interest and given in good faith. Its overall attitudes seem healthy and should stimulate ideas and action. They are right that "our work can therefore be regarded only as a beginning." I hope, at a cost of ?918 000, that the exercise will prove to have been cost-effective.
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- 1979
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10. Characterization of Fibrin Degradation Products in Patients on Ancrod Therapy: Comparison with Fibrinogen Derivatives Produced by Plasmin
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G. P. McNicol, Colin R. M. Prentice, and W. Edgar
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Ancrod ,Immunodiffusion ,Plasmin ,Proteolysis ,Size-exclusion chromatography ,Immunoelectrophoresis ,Fibrinogen ,Fibrin ,medicine ,Humans ,Fibrinolysin ,biology ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Venoms ,Chemistry ,Thrombosis ,Hematology ,Molecular biology ,Molecular Weight ,Biochemistry ,Chromatography, Gel ,biology.protein ,Peptide Hydrolases ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Summary. The fibrin digestion products which appear in serum of patients having treatment with ancrod have been compared with derivatives of human fibrinogen produced by plasmin by means of immunoelectrophoresis, immunodiffusion and gel filtration techniques. In ancrod-treated patients the large molecular weight derivatives X and Y, as well as fragments D and E were seen 4 hr after the start of therapy. By 24 hr the main serum component was fragment D with low concentrations of large molecular weight derivatives still present, but fragment E had been cleared from the circulation. The identity of these fragments to the known products of fibrinogen proteolysis by plasmin has been confirmed. It is suggested that the initial degradation of fibrin micro-clots produced in the circulation during ancrod infusion is mediated by the fibrinolytic enzyme system.
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- 1974
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11. Antithrombotic potential of dihomo-gamma-linolenic acid in man
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P. B. A. Kernoff, G. P. McNicol, J.A. Davies, A. L. Willis, and K. J. Stone
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Adult ,Blood Platelets ,Male ,Drug ,Linolenic Acids ,Platelet Aggregation ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Arachidonic Acids ,Pharmacology ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Thromboembolism ,Antithrombotic ,Humans ,Platelet ,Prostaglandin E1 ,General Environmental Science ,media_common ,Clinical Trials as Topic ,Hemostasis ,Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ,Red Cell ,Prostaglandins E ,General Engineering ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Adenosine diphosphate ,Dose–response relationship ,chemistry ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Arachidonic acid ,Research Article - Abstract
The effects of orally ingested dihomo-gamma-linolenic acid (DHLA), the natural biosynthetic precursor of prostaglandin E1 (PGE1), were assessed in human volunteers. Single doses of DHLA (0.1--2g) increased the proportion of DHLA relative to arachidonic acid in plasma and platelets and also increased the ex-vivo capacity of platelets to produce PGE1 and PGE2. More pronounced effects were observed during sustained treatment (five days to four weeks) when DHLA also accumulated in red cell membranes. These biochemical changes were accompanied by potentially antithrombotic changes in haemostatic function. The most common effect, which was consistently detected after 0.1-g single doses of DHLA or its methyl ester, was a decrease in plasma heparin-neutralising activity. Inhibition of platelet aggregation induced by adenosine diphosphate was also detected, though this was generally less pronounced. Sustained treatment in one subject also produced definite inhibition of ristocetin-induced platelet aggregation. There was only one possible adverse effect--a transient cough in a subject with a history of asthma. DHLA therefore seems to have considerable potential as an agent for preventing and treating human thromboembolic disease.
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- 1977
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12. EFFECT OF INTRAUTERINE CONTRACEPTIVE DEVICE ON UTERINE HAEMOSTASIS: A MORPHOLOGICAL STUDY
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K. Bradbury, S. M. Rajah, M. E. Foley, S.R. Aparicio, C. C. Bird, J. K. Clayton, G. P. Mcnicol, D. M. Jenkins, and J. S. Scott
- Subjects
Adult ,Blood Platelets ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Uterus ,Endometrium ,Fibrin ,Menstruation ,Vascularity ,Humans ,Medicine ,Platelet ,Menorrhagia ,Menstrual cycle ,media_common ,Hemostasis ,biology ,business.industry ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Microscopy, Electron ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,biology.protein ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Intrauterine Devices - Abstract
The effect of the intrauterine contraceptive device (IUCD) on uterine haemostasis was studied at various stages of the menstrual cycle in a series of 46 patients by light- and electron-microscopy and by following the distribution of an infusion of 51Cr-labelled autologous platelets. The endometrium in contact with the IUCD in the majority of cases showed grooving with atrophy and mild chronic inflammation in the surrounding tissues. The adjacent stroma also showed increased vascularity and occasional foci of haemorrhage but the increased blood loss associated with the presence of the IUCD could not be attributed to mechanical erosion or stromal blood vessels by the device. During menstruation the presence of an IUCD does not appear to inhibit the formation of fibrin/platelet thrombi although both in control and IUCD patients there was a striking paucity of platelet/fibrin thrombi in circumstances where their formation should be enhanced. In contrast to other workers we have not observed that gaps or breaks in the endothelial lining of endometrial blood vessels occur with any greater frequency in patients fitted with an IUCD. The principal mechanism by which uterine haemostasis is achieved remains to be established.
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- 1979
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13. THE COMPARATIVE EFFECTS OF A SYNTHETIC AND A'NATURAL' OESTROGEN ON THE HAEMOSTATIC MECHANISM IN PATIENTS WITH PRIMARY AMENORRHOEA
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J. L. Toy, J. A. Davies, G. P. Mcnicol, and K. W. Hancock
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Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Physiology ,Ethinyl Estradiol ,medicine ,Humans ,In patient ,skin and connective tissue diseases ,Adverse effect ,Amenorrhea ,Prothrombin time ,Gynecology ,Hemostasis ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Estriol ,business.industry ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Estrogens ,Plasminogen ,Succinates ,Haemostatic function ,Factor VII ,Treatment period ,Plasma concentration ,Primary amenorrhoea ,Prothrombin Time ,Female ,business ,After treatment - Abstract
Summary A synthetic and a natural oestrogen were administered alternately for three months to nine women with primary amenorrhoea using a randomized cross-over schedule. Measurements of haemostatic function were performed before and at the end of each treatment period. No significant change in haemostatic function was observed after treatment with the‘natural’ oestrogen, oestriol succinate. In contrast, treatment with a synthetic oestrogen, ethinyloestradiol, caused shortening of the prothrombin time and an increase in plasma concentration of factor VII and plasminogen. These data support other observations in suggesting that natural oestrogens may have fewer potentially adverse effects on haemostatic function than synthetic oestrogen. We thank the Special Trustees of Leeds General Infirmary for financial support towards the technical costs of this project. Organon Laboratories Limited provided generous financial assistance and the oestriol succinate tablets used in the study. We are grateful to Mrs B. Griffin, Mrs A. Spencer, Mrs G. Levell and Mr J. Leek for technical help.
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- 1978
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14. NORMAL AND ABNORMAL FIBRINOLYSIS
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P B A Kernoff and G P Mcnicol
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Fibrinolysis ,Plasminogen ,General Medicine ,Hematologic Diseases ,Plasminogen Activators ,Fibrinolytic Agents ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Cardiology ,Humans ,Abnormal fibrinolysis ,Fibrinolysin ,business ,Peptide Hydrolases - Published
- 1977
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15. BLOOD COAGULATION IN PATHOLOGICAL THROMBUS FORMATION AND THE DETECTION IN BLOOD OF A THROMBOTIC TENDENCY
- Author
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G P McNICOL and J A Davies
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Blood Platelets ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Arterial Occlusive Diseases ,Pregnancy ,Thromboembolism ,medicine ,Humans ,Coagulation (water treatment) ,Thrombus ,Blood Coagulation ,Pathological ,Fibrin ,Coagulants ,business.industry ,Pregnancy Complications, Hematologic ,Thrombin ,Anticoagulants ,Estrogens ,Thrombosis ,General Medicine ,Blood Coagulation Disorders ,Thrombophlebitis ,medicine.disease ,Antifibrinolytic Agents ,Female ,business ,Contraceptives, Oral - Published
- 1978
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16. ε-AMINOCAPROIC ACID AND OTHER INHIBITORS OF FIBRINOLYSIS
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A. S. Douglas and G. P. McNICOL
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Blood Platelets ,Male ,Biomedical Research ,Encephalomyelitis, Autoimmune, Experimental ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Encephalomyelitis ,Pharmacology ,Postoperative Complications ,Pharmacotherapy ,Drug Therapy ,Fibrinolysis ,Deoxyribonuclease I ,Humans ,Medicine ,Streptokinase ,Platelet ,Fibrinolysin ,Enzyme Inhibitors ,Anaphylaxis ,Hematuria ,Aminocaproates ,Prostatectomy ,Hemostasis ,business.industry ,Research ,Streptodornase and Streptokinase ,General Medicine ,Blood Coagulation Disorders ,medicine.disease ,Shock, Septic ,Kidney Neoplasms ,Metabolism ,Aminocaproic Acid ,Rabbits ,Aminocaproic acid ,Trypsin Inhibitors ,business ,medicine.drug - Published
- 1964
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17. Effect of gaboon viper (Bitis gabonica) venom on blood coagulation, platelets, and the fibrinolytic enzyme system
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C. D. Forbes, A. S. Douglas, J. C. Ferguson, G. P. McNicol, and Alexander G.G. Turpie
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Blood Platelets ,Poison control ,Venom ,In Vitro Techniques ,Pharmacology ,Fibrinogen ,complex mixtures ,Thromboplastin ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,Adenine nucleotide ,Animals ,Humans ,Medicine ,Blood Coagulation ,biology ,Adenine Nucleotides ,Venoms ,business.industry ,Fibrinolysis ,Thrombin ,Anticoagulants ,Caseins ,Snakes ,Articles ,General Medicine ,biology.organism_classification ,Bitis ,Coagulation ,Gaboon viper ,Immunology ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The action of the venom of the gaboon viper (Bitis gabonica) on blood coagulation, platelets, and the fibrinolytic enzyme system was studied. The results confirm that the venom of Bitis gabonica has a marked anticoagulant action in vitro. The venom appears to impair clot formation by a direct proteolytic action on fibrinogen, releasing soluble breakdown products.
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- 1969
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18. The effect of Atromid-S on the fibrinolytic enzyme system
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G. P. McNicol, B. Sweet, Morna Gale, and B.M. Rikfind
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medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Glyceride ,Blood lipids ,Androsterone ,Fibrinogen ,Hemostatics ,Glycerides ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Drug Therapy ,Internal medicine ,Fibrinolysis ,Deoxyribonuclease I ,Humans ,Medicine ,Streptokinase ,Clofibrate ,Arteriosclerosis obliterans ,Coagulants ,business.industry ,Anticholesteremic Agents ,Plasminogen ,Arteriosclerosis Obliterans ,Streptodornase and Streptokinase ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Lipids ,Butyrates ,Cholesterol ,Endocrinology ,chemistry ,Fibrinolytic enzyme ,business ,medicine.drug - Published
- 1965
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19. Effect of RA233 on Platelet Function In Vitro
- Author
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Alexander G.G. Turpie, A. A. Hassanein, A. S. Douglas, and G. P. McNicol
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Blood Platelets ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Clot retraction ,In Vitro Techniques ,Pharmacology ,Calcium ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Platelet Adhesiveness ,Adenine nucleotide ,Platelet adhesiveness ,Humans ,Platelet ,Kaolin ,Blood Coagulation ,General Environmental Science ,Adenine Nucleotides ,Chemistry ,Platelet Factor 3 ,General Engineering ,Papers and Originals ,General Medicine ,Blood Coagulation Factors ,In vitro ,Adenosine diphosphate ,Pyrimidines ,Biochemistry ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Glass - Abstract
RA233, a new pyrimido-pyrimidine compound, is a powerful inhibitor of platelet function tested in vitro; it inhibits calcium and adenosine diphosphate (A.D.P.)-induced platelet aggregation, inhibits the retention of platelets by glass beads, decreases the release of platelet factor 3 by kaolin, and inhibits clot retraction. In some in-vitro systems RA233 is significantly more potent that its analogue RA433 in inhibiting platelet function.
- Published
- 1970
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20. CHANGES IN PLATELET BEHAVIOUR DURING ARVIN THERAPY
- Author
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A. S. Douglas, Alexander G.G. Turpie, G. P. Mcnicol, C. R. M. Prentice, and A. A. Hassanein
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Platelet aggregation ,business.industry ,Impaired platelet aggregation ,General Medicine ,Pharmacology ,Positive correlation ,Peak concentration ,Adenosine diphosphate ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Biochemistry ,chemistry ,Vascular Patency ,Medicine ,Platelet ,business - Abstract
In seven patients treated with ' Arvin ', a purified coagulant fraction of Malayan pit-viper venom, changes in platelet aggregation in response to adenosine diphosphate were studied. In all patients platelet aggregation was reduced in the first 24 hours of therapy. In the later stages of therapy, aggregation tended to return to the pretreatment values. The level of circulating fibrinogen-degradation products rose to high levels in the early stages of therapy, and a positive correlation was found between these degradation products and the extent of the inhibition of platelet aggregation. In four of the seven patients the greatest inhibition of aggregation happened at the time when the fibrinogen-degradation products were at their peak concentration. It is suggested that fibrinogen-degradation products may have been mainly responsible for the decrease in platelet aggregation. This impaired platelet aggregation may be important in the maintenance of vascular patency during arvin therapy.
- Published
- 1969
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21. Effects of Three Mamba Venoms on the Haemostatic Mechanism
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G. P. McNicol, J. C. Ferguson, and N. MacKay
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Blood Platelets ,Plasmin ,Proteolysis ,Fibrinogen ,complex mixtures ,Thromboplastin ,Thrombin ,medicine ,Animals ,Platelet ,Fibrinolysin ,Blood Coagulation ,biology ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Adenine Nucleotides ,Venoms ,Fibrinolysis ,Mamba ,Anticoagulants ,Plasminogen ,Snakes ,Hematology ,biology.organism_classification ,Biochemistry ,Prothrombin Time ,Uncompetitive inhibitor ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The venoms of three mambas (Dendroaspis angusticeps, Dendroaspis polylepis and Dendroaspis jamesoni) were shown to be anticoagulant, an effect due largely to interference with the blood thromboplastin mechanism. The venoms were also capable of inhibiting platelet aggregation and reactivity to ADP. All three venoms possessed proteolytic properties but paradoxically reduced euglobulin clot lysis activity. When studied in purified systems this effect was shown to be due to uncompetitive inhibition of plasmin.
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- 1968
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22. Serum enzyme changes after intramuscular bleeding in patients with haemophilia and Christmas disease
- Author
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Colin R. M. Prentice, Charles D. Forbes, John King, and G. P. McNicol
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Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Fructose-bisphosphate aldolase ,Hemophilia A ,Haemophilia ,Hemophilia B ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Hematoma ,Muscular Diseases ,Fructose-Bisphosphate Aldolase ,Internal medicine ,Lactate dehydrogenase ,medicine ,Humans ,Aspartate Aminotransferases ,Creatine Kinase ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,L-Lactate Dehydrogenase ,biology ,business.industry ,Aldolase A ,Alanine Transaminase ,Articles ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Endocrinology ,Enzyme ,chemistry ,Alanine transaminase ,biology.protein ,Creatine kinase ,business - Abstract
Serum creatine kinase, lactate dehydrogenase, aspartate and alanine transaminases, and aldolase were determined in 41 hospital inpatients with haemophilia or Christmas disease and no significant differences from the normal ranges were found.(3) Levels of these enzymes in a further 10 such patients who had sustained muscle haematomata were determined: in all of these there was a consistent rise in the level of creatine kinase, the peak occurring between 36 and 96 hours. In bleeding disorders a rise in serum creatine kinase levels may be useful as a diagnostic test for intramuscular haemorrhage.
- Published
- 1972
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23. THE BEHAVIOUR OF THE COAGULATION AND FIBRINOLYTIC MECHANISMS IN ABRUPTIO PLACENTAE
- Author
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G. P. McNicol, A. S. Douglas, and John Bonnar
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Anesthesia ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Medicine ,Coagulation (water treatment) ,business ,Surgery - Published
- 1969
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24. Amyloidosis Associated with the Nephrotic Syndrome and Transfusion Reactions in a Haemophiliac
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G. P. McNicol, A. S. Douglas, Marian M. Izatt, C. R. M. Prentice, and J. F. Adams
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Adult ,Male ,Nephrotic Syndrome ,Renal function ,Antigen-Antibody Complex ,Hemophilia A ,Kidney ,Serology ,Immune system ,Antigen ,medicine ,Humans ,biology ,business.industry ,Amyloidosis ,Transfusion Reaction ,Hematology ,medicine.disease ,Fragment crystallizable region ,Antibodies, Anti-Idiotypic ,Blood Group Incompatibility ,Immunoglobulin G ,Antibody Formation ,Immunology ,biology.protein ,Autopsy ,Antibody ,business ,Nephrotic syndrome - Abstract
Summary. It is suggested that the immunological response in a severe haemophiliac to longstanding incompatible plasma infusions may have been responsible for the development of amyloidosis which culminated in the nephrotic syndrome. Serological studies showed that the patient had a circulating anti-Gm(1) antibody, and also that possibly he was on occasions reacting violently towards the infusion of immune complexes formed between the IgG1 (Fc region) antigens, Gm(1) and ISf(1) and their antibodies. Despite the fact that there was a marked reduction in the number and severity of transfusion reactions after treatment solely with selected Gm(-1) plasmas, there was a progressive deterioration in the patient's renal function.
- Published
- 1971
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25. Plasminogen-activator-producing Tumour
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J. F. Davidson, G. L. Frank, A. S. Douglas, G. P. McNicol, and T. J. Anderson
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Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Lung Neoplasms ,Hemorrhage ,Biology ,Culture Techniques ,medicine ,Carcinoma ,Humans ,Neoplasm Metastasis ,Aged ,General Environmental Science ,Aminocaproates ,Lung ,General Engineering ,Plasminogen ,Papers and Originals ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Arm ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Female ,Aminocaproic acid ,Plasminogen activator ,medicine.drug - Abstract
In a patient with giant-cell carcinoma of the lung a secondary tumour deposit in the arm was incised and bled for three weeks. Investigations showed the tumour to be rich in plasminogen activator. Haemostasis in the tumour was achieved with aminocaproic acid therapy. For a period the plasminogen-activator properties were retained in cell culture of the tumour.
- Published
- 1969
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26. Some Effects of Trypsin and Streptokinase on Platelet Aggregation
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G. P McNicol, Patricia A. Wilson, and A. S Douglas
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Text mining ,Platelet aggregation ,business.industry ,Streptokinase ,medicine ,Hematology ,Pharmacology ,Trypsin ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
SummaryThe effect of the proteolytic enzymes trypsin and streptokinase on platelet aggregation were investigated using the turbidimetric system of Born and the Chandler tube system. The following results were obtained :1. ADP and adenosine display a similar action in the Chandler tube system as in the turbidimetric system.2. Platelet aggregation is accelerated in the Chandler tube system by trypsin over a range of concentrations 10 µg/ml to 1 mg/ml and in the turbidimetric system over a range of concentrations 100 µg/ml to 1 mg/ml.3. Streptokinase, at low concentrations, enhances aggregation in the Chandler tube system but plasma antiplasmin must be destroyed before a similar effect is observed in the turbidimetric system.4. The results obtained with trypsin cannot be accounted for solely on the basis of its coagulant action.
- Published
- 1967
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27. Clinical Trial of Epsilon-aminocaproic Acid in Severe Haemophilia
- Author
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Anne H. C. Dubber, G. A. McDonald, A. M. Gordon, A. S. Douglas, and G. P. McNicol
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Biomedical Research ,Plasmin ,Streptokinase ,Statistics as Topic ,Hemophilia A ,Toxicology ,Haemophilia ,Fibrinogen ,Fibrin ,Placebos ,Drug Therapy ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Deoxyribonuclease I ,Humans ,Fibrinolysin ,Enzyme Inhibitors ,General Environmental Science ,Aminocaproates ,Urokinase ,Factor VIII ,biology ,business.industry ,General Engineering ,Plasminogen ,Papers and Originals ,Streptodornase and Streptokinase ,General Medicine ,Blood Protein Electrophoresis ,medicine.disease ,Blood proteins ,Endocrinology ,Aminocaproic Acid ,biology.protein ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Aminocaproic acid ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The main components of the fibrinolytic enzyme system are plasminogen, plasmin, activators, and inhibitors. Plasminogen, a naturally occurring plasma globulin, is converted by activators to plasmin, an enzyme which can digest many proteins, including fibrinogen and fibrin, prothrombin, factor V, and antihaemophilic globulin. Under physiological circumstances it is thought that natural inhibitors in the plasma restrict plasmin to digestion of fibrin, but in pathological fibrinolytic (hyperplasminaemic) states plasma proteins, including fibrinogen and antihaemophilic globulin, are digested. Activators of plasminogen include a plasma activator, trace quantities of which are probably responsible for physiological fibrinolytic activity, a urinary activator named urokinase, and activators of bacterial origin?for example, streptokinase. E.A.C.A., a potent competitive inhibitor of plasminogen activa tion (Alkjaersig et al., 1959), was first used in man by Sherry et al. (1959), who found it effective in inhibiting plasma fibrino lytic activity induced by a variety of plasminogen activators. The value of E.A.C.A. in the treatment of pathological fibrinolytic states has recently been reviewed by McNicol and Douglas (1964), who also discuss the pharmacology and toxicity of E.A.C.A. E.A.C.A., a synthetic amino-acid which closely resembles lysine in structure, is rapidly absorbed when taken by mouth. Peak plasma levels are found about two hours after a single oral dose. Urinary excretion is also rapid, the greater part of a single dose being recovered unchanged in the urine in 12 hours. The action of E.A.C.A. as an inhibitor of plasminogen activation is seen with plasma concentrations above 1 mg./100 ml. The first report of the use of E.A.C.A. in haemophilia was from McNicol et al. (1961a) who, during a study of the bene ficial effect on post-operative haemostasis of E.A.C.A. given to produce local inhibition of urokinase activity in the urinary tract, gave E.A.C.A. to a high-grade haemophiliac with haematuria. The haematuria ceased with E.A.C.A. administra tion, but at the same time the patient developed renal colic and was found subsequently to have permanent loss of function in one kidney, presumably because of ureteric blockage with unlysable clot. Steiger et al. (1962) and Barkhan (1964) have also reported successful control of haematuria in three patients and one patient respectively with haemophilia, without any adverse effects on renal function. Abe et al. (1962) and Reid et al. (1964) report favourably on the use of E.A.C.A. for other haemorrhagic complications in small numbers of haemophiliacs. On theoretical grounds there are reasons for considering that E.A.C.A. might have a beneficial systemic effect in the treatment of high-grade haemophilia, in addition to control of local
- Published
- 1965
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- View/download PDF
28. Cryoprecipitate Therapy in Haemophilia
- Author
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Wallace J, G. P. McNicol, A. S. Douglas, Short Dw, G. A. McDonald, R. D. Barr, Hunter J, J. F. Davidson, and C. D. Forbes
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Blood transfusion ,medicine.medical_treatment ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Hemophilia A ,Haemophilia ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Hemarthrosis ,medicine ,Chemical Precipitation ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Intensive care medicine ,Hematoma ,Factor VIII ,business.industry ,Fibrinogen ,Sterilization ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Cold Temperature ,von Willebrand Diseases ,Human plasma ,Surgical Procedures, Operative ,Cryoprecipitate ,Injections, Intravenous ,Chemical and Drug Induced Liver Injury ,business - Abstract
This paper describes experience over an 18-month period of a new preparation of factor VIII, cryoprecipitate, prepared by the Regional Blood Transfusion Service from human plasma. This relatively simple and inexpensive method selectively extracts the factor VIII leaving behind the other blood products for use in other ways.Replacement therapy in the treatment of haemophilia has been generally regarded as inadequate due to the difficulty in obtaining potent antihaemophilic globulin in sufficient amounts, and cryoprecipitate represents a useful advance.Bleeding episodes in 25 patients with factor VIII deficiency have been treated with cryoprecipitate on 41 occasions and an assessment of the haemostatic effect of this material has been made in treating haemarthrosis, muscle haematomata and the management of major and minor surgical operations. Routine follow-up over a 6 month period was undertaken to determine the incidence of side effects. Two cases of hepatitis were found, possibly resulting from cryoprecipitate therapy. However, both patients had also received blood or fresh frozen plasma and the source of the hepatitis virus must remain in doubt. No factor VIII inhibitors were found despite repeated courses of therapy in several patients.The advantages and disadvantages of cryoprecipitate are set out and its encouraging place in the management of haemophilic bleeding assessed.
- Published
- 1969
- Full Text
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29. Coagulation and Fibrinolytic Systems in Pre-eclampsia and Eclampsia
- Author
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G. P. Mcnicol, John Bonnae, and A. S. Douglas
- Subjects
Placenta ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Kidney ,Pre-Eclampsia ,Ischemia ,Pregnancy ,Eclampsia ,Maternal-Fetal Exchange ,reproductive and urinary physiology ,General Environmental Science ,biology ,Obstetrics ,Fibrinolysis ,General Engineering ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,General Medicine ,female genital diseases and pregnancy complications ,Proteinuria ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Coagulation ,Hypertension ,Female ,Kidney Diseases ,Serum Globulins ,Adult ,Blood Platelets ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Placental insufficiency ,Fibrin ,Embryonic and Fetal Development ,Fibrinolytic Agents ,Internal medicine ,Euglobulin lysis time ,medicine ,Coagulation (water treatment) ,Humans ,Blood Coagulation ,business.industry ,Papers and Originals ,medicine.disease ,Endocrinology ,Immunology ,biology.protein ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Epilepsy, Tonic-Clonic ,business ,Fibrinolytic agent - Abstract
The coagulation and fibrinolytic mechanisms were investigated in a group of patients with severe pre-eclampsia and eclampsia and the findings were compared with those of healthy women in late pregnancy. In patients with pre-eclampsia the following significant differences were found: (1) greater depression of plasma fibrinolytic activity (euglobulin lysis time) than in normal pregnancy, (2) a higher level of inhibitor to urokinaseinduced lysis, (3) increased levels of serum fibrin degradation products, and (4) reduced platelet counts.In patients with eclampsia a progressive increase of the level of serum fibrin degradation products was found over the three days following eclamptic seizures. No such increase occurred after grand mal seizures in late pregnancy. The findings in this study support the view that intravascular clotting is taking place in pre-eclampsia and that this disturbance of the balance between coagulation and fibrinolysis may be localized to certain areas of the vascular compartment, particularly the placental and renal circulations. Fibrin deposition in the maternal vessels supplying the placenta would impair the placental blood flow, which may explain the placental insufficiency which occurs in pre-eclampsia. Likewise fibrin deposition in the renal vasculature will result in glomerular damage and proteinuria. Hypertension may be related to the renal ischaemic changes or a compensatory response to the presence of fibrin deposition in the vascular compartment. This evidence of intravascular fibrin deposition raises the question of the possible therapeutic value of antithrombotic agents to inhibit the clotting process. On a theoretical basis such treatment might be expected to improve blood flow to the placenta and thereby fetal growth.
- Published
- 1971
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30. Studies on East African Snakes
- Author
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A. S. Douglas, C. D. Forbes, G. P. McNicol, and Alexander G.G. Turpie
- Subjects
Adult ,Zoology ,Venom ,In Vitro Techniques ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Humans ,Medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Mode of action ,Envenomation ,Blood Coagulation ,Laboratory methods ,biology ,Venoms ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,Africa, Eastern ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Snake bites ,Echis carinatus ,Immunology ,Blood Coagulation Tests ,business - Published
- 1966
- Full Text
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31. Symposium on Fibrinolysis
- Author
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G. P. McNicol
- Subjects
03 medical and health sciences ,medicine.medical_specialty ,0302 clinical medicine ,business.industry ,Internal medicine ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Fibrinolysis ,Cardiology ,Medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,030223 otorhinolaryngology ,business - Published
- 1963
- Full Text
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32. The Venom of the Boomslang (Dispholidus Typus): In Vivo and in Vitro Studies
- Author
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N. MacKay, Ashe J, Bagshawe A, Forrester At, G. P. McNicol, and J. C. Ferguson
- Subjects
Boomslang ,biology ,business.industry ,Antivenom ,Dispholidus typus ,Poison control ,Venom ,Hematology ,Pharmacology ,biology.organism_classification ,complex mixtures ,In vitro ,In vivo ,Medicine ,Potency ,business - Abstract
SummaryAn account is given of the effects of boomslang venom in man. Evidence was found of a fibrinolytic state apparently secondary to the coagulant action of the venom. These features rapidly responded to the administration of specific antivenom. In vitro studies, using a homogenate of boomslang parotids, confirmed the coagulant properties of the venom and showed them to be of much greater potency than the proteolytic actions.
- Published
- 1969
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33. Experimental warfarin poisoning in the dog
- Author
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C. Thomson, C. D. Forbes, A.D. McEwan, Colin R. M. Prentice, and G. P. McNicol
- Subjects
Prothrombin time ,medicine.medical_specialty ,General Veterinary ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Factor VII ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Endocrinology ,Coagulation ,chemistry ,Bleeding time ,Internal medicine ,Anesthesia ,Hemostasis ,Fibrinolysis ,Euglobulin lysis time ,medicine ,business ,Blood coagulation test - Abstract
Experimental warfarin poisoning in dogs produced a profound haemostatic defect with depression in the levels of factors II, VII, IX and X and gross prolongation of the bleeding time. Surprisingly platelet function was unaltered suggesting that in the dog the intrinsic coagulation pathway plays an important part in the normal bleeding time. There was slight shortening of the euglobulin lysis time, but no other changes in the components of the fibrinolytic enzyme system. Rapid reversal of the clotting abnormality was produced by the intravenous injection of vitamin K1.
- Published
- 1973
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34. Fibrinolytic Enhancement by Stanozolol: A Double Blind Trial
- Author
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G. P. McNicol, J. F. Davidson, M. Lochhead, and G. A. McDonald
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Hematology ,Phenformin ,Placebo ,Gastroenterology ,Placebo group ,law.invention ,Double blind ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Endocrinology ,chemistry ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Internal medicine ,Fibrinolysis ,Coagulation testing ,medicine ,business ,Stanozolol ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Summary Thirty-four men with ischaemic heart disease were given 10 mg stanozolol per day, 10 mg stanozolol plus 100 mg phenformin per day, or a placebo for 12 mth, in a double blind randomized study. A panel of fibrinolytic and coagulation tests was performed at monthly intervals. Throughout the study the groups on active treatment showed significant enhancement of plasma fibrinolytic activity compared with their base-line values, and compared with the placebo group. No significant difference was found in the enhancement of fibrinolysis wliich was produced by either active treatment regimens, and it is concluded that 10 mg stanozolol daily-is as effective as 10 mg stanozolol plus 100 mg phenformin daily in increasing plasma fibrinolytic activity in men with ischaemic heart disease.
- Published
- 1972
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35. RADIOISOTOPE KNEE JOINT SCANS IN HAEMOPHILIA AND CHRISTMAS DISEASE
- Author
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William R. Greig, Colin R. M. Prentice, G. P. McNicol, and Charles D. Forbes
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Disease ,Knee Joint ,Hemarthrosis ,Technetium ,medicine.disease ,Haemophilia ,Surgery ,Joint disease ,chemistry ,Arthropathy ,medicine ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Radiology ,Abnormality ,business - Abstract
1. in thirty-five patients, twenty-eight with classical haemophilia and seven with Christmas disease, arthropathy of the knee of various grades has been investigated by radioisotope scanning after intravenous injection of technetium, 99mTc. 2. The abnormality of the colour scan particularly matches the clinical severity in acute haemarthrosis. 3. In patients with no clinically apparent joint disease the scan may be of value in the early detection of involvement. 4. The possible value of articular scanning in the selection of patients for treatment and in the assessment of the short and long term results is discussed.
- Published
- 1972
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36. Platelets in Thrombosis Their Clinical Significance and the Evaluation of Potential Drugs
- Author
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H Reuter, G. P McNicol, J van de Loo, G. V. R Born, and J. R. A Mitchell
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Platelet ,Clinical significance ,Hematology ,business ,medicine.disease ,Gastroenterology ,Thrombosis - Published
- 1974
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37. THE PREPARATION AND USE OF 131I-TAGGED FIBRINOGEN TO DEMONSTRATE FIBRINOLYSIS
- Author
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G P McNICOL and W E Clement
- Subjects
Chemistry ,Fibrinolysis ,medicine.medical_treatment ,medicine ,Fibrinogen ,Humans ,Articles ,General Medicine ,Pharmacology ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,medicine.drug - Published
- 1959
- Full Text
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38. Rupture of the ureter due to crushing injury in a boy with severe haemophilia
- Author
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James H. Levack, G. Roy Sutherland, G. P. McNicol, Colin R. M. Prentice, C. D. Forbes, James F. Adams, James A. Craig, and John T. Ireland
- Subjects
Male ,Rupture ,Diminution ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,business.industry ,Renal function ,Urography ,Anastomosis ,Hemophilia A ,Haemophilia ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Ureter ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Cryoglobulin ,Hemophilias ,Intravenous Pyelogram ,Humans ,Medicine ,business ,Radioisotope Renography ,Cryoglobulins - Abstract
A haemophilic boy, aged 14 years, presented with rupture of the upper end of the ureter as a result of a crushing injury. Primary ureteral anastomosis was successfully carried out under cover of cryoglobulin precipitate therapy. Renal function tests carried out at 2 months were normal, although the isotope renogram showed slight diminution of function on the injured side and an intravenous pyelogram showed some narrowing of the site of the anastomosis.
- Published
- 1971
- Full Text
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39. Effects on blood coagulation, fibrinolysis, and platelet aggregation of normal and atheromatous aortic tissue
- Author
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C. R. M. Prentice, A. S. Douglas, and G. P. McNicol
- Subjects
Blood Platelets ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Epidermal Cyst ,In Vitro Techniques ,Fibrin ,Thromboplastin ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,Fibrinolytic Agents ,medicine.artery ,Internal medicine ,Fibrinolysis ,medicine ,Humans ,Platelet ,Blood Coagulation ,Aorta ,Prothrombin time ,biology ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Thrombosis ,Articles ,General Medicine ,Coagulation ,Prothrombin Time ,cardiovascular system ,biology.protein ,Cardiology ,business ,Fibrinolytic agent - Abstract
A comparison was made between the effects of atheromatous and normal areas of the same aorta on coagulation, fibrinolytic, and platelet aggregating systems. In the thromboplastin generation test it was found that atheromatous aorta possessed significantly greater ability to generate intrinsic prothrombin activator than did normal aortic tissue. But, by the one-stage prothrombin time technique, the content of extrinsic thromboplastin in both types of aorta was similar. Aortic preparations, consisting of intimal and medial layers only, were not found to possess fibrinolytic ability and did not contain inhibitors of the fibrinolytic system. The adhesion of platelets to ulcerated atheromatous areas of aorta was significantly greater than to normal or non-ulcerated atheromatous areas. However, homogenates of atheromatous and normal aorta did not differ in their ability to accelerate platelet aggregation and fibrin clot formation when tested by a modified Chandler9s tube technique. The significance of the findings is discussed and the suggestion made that the mechanisms by which atheromatous aortic tissue might predispose towards intravascular thrombosis in vivo are the ability of such tissue to enhance intrinsic prothrombin activator formation and platelet aggregation.
- Published
- 1966
- Full Text
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40. Effects of diet and gliclazide on the haemostatic system of non-insulin-dependent diabetics
- Author
-
R C Paton, G P McNicol, P B Kernoff, and J K Wales
- Subjects
Adult ,Blood Glucose ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Platelet Adhesiveness ,Von Willebrand factor ,Internal medicine ,Diabetes mellitus ,Platelet adhesiveness ,von Willebrand Factor ,Diabetes Mellitus ,medicine ,Humans ,Gliclazide ,Platelet ,Antigens ,Blood Coagulation ,Aged ,General Environmental Science ,Factor VIII ,biology ,business.industry ,General Engineering ,Non insulin dependent diabetes mellitus ,Heparin Antagonists ,General Medicine ,Haemostatic function ,Heparin ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Sulfonylurea Compounds ,Endocrinology ,biology.protein ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Female ,business ,Research Article ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The effect of the sulphonylurea gliclazide on tests of haemostatic function was studied in 14 newly diagnosed non-insulin-dependent diabetics. After two months' treatment with diet alone 11 of the 14 were given gliclazide; the three others remained on dietary treatment. Compared with pretreatment values, significant reductions in platelets retention, factor VIII-related antigen, factor VIII coagulant activity, and plasma heparin neutralising activity accompanied a fall in the plasma glucose concentration due to either diet alone or diet and gliclazide. The beneficial effects of gliclazide on platelet abnormalities seem likely to be due to its hypoglycaemic action rather than to any direct effect on haemostatic function.
- Published
- 1981
- Full Text
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41. Preoperative prediction of postoperative deep vein thrombosis
- Author
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J K Clayton, J A Anderson, and G P McNicol
- Subjects
Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Deep vein ,Thrombophlebitis ,Fibrin ,Varicose Veins ,Postoperative Complications ,Varicose veins ,Coagulation testing ,Humans ,Medicine ,Antigens ,General Environmental Science ,biology ,business.industry ,Body Weight ,Age Factors ,General Engineering ,General Medicine ,Heparin ,Middle Aged ,Prognosis ,medicine.disease ,Thrombosis ,Surgery ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Coagulation ,biology.protein ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Serum Globulins ,Radiology ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Research Article ,medicine.drug - Abstract
A range of clinical data was obtained from 124 patients about to undergo operation and several coagulation tests were performed. No patient received prophylaxis for deep vein thrombosis, and isotopic scanning after operation showed that 20 patients had developed thrombosis. a simiple prognostic index for predicting which patients would develop postoperative deep vein thrombosis was constructed using the clinical and coagulation data obtained before operation. The five variables with the best predictive power-euglobulin lysis time, age, presence of varicose veins, fibrin related antigen, and percentage overweight-produced an equation that identfied 95% of those who developed deep vein thrombosis and misallocated only 28% of those who did not develop thrombosis. In view of the complications that low-dose heparin and dextran can cause, giving prophylaxis to under a third of the patients who will not develop deep vein thrombosis is clearly better than giving it to all.
- Published
- 1976
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Prophylaxis of postoperative deep vein thrombosis: selective use of low-dose heparin in high-risk patients
- Author
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A J Crandon, V Thompson, G P McNicol, J A Anderson, and K R Peel
- Subjects
Risk ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,Deep vein ,Population ,Thrombophlebitis ,Drug Administration Schedule ,Fibrin ,Postoperative Complications ,Humans ,Medicine ,Antigens ,education ,Aged ,General Environmental Science ,Blood coagulation test ,education.field_of_study ,biology ,Heparin ,business.industry ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Body Weight ,General Engineering ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Thrombosis ,Surgery ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Anesthesia ,biology.protein ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Female ,Serum Globulins ,Blood Coagulation Tests ,business ,Research Article ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Administration of prophylactic low-dose subcutaneous heparin to prevent postoperative deep vein thrombosis is expensive, entails treating many patients unnecessarily, and causes some side effects. By using a predictive index a population of patients who are at particularly high risk of developing postoperative deep vein thrombosis may be identified preoperatively. Prophylaxis was given only to these patients, resulting in an incidence of deep vein thrombosis of 3.8% compared with 16.1% in previous studies in which no specific prophylaxis was given. By limiting prophylaxis to the group of patients identified by the predictive index as being at high risk of developing postoperative deep vein thrombosis results may be obtained that are as good as those expected from treating the whole population. Thus many patients are saved from exposure to low-dose subcutaneous heparin.
- Published
- 1980
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Acute intravascular haemolysis associated with cephalexin therapy
- Author
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J. A. Craig, R. Mitchell, C. D. Forbes, and G. P. McNicol
- Subjects
Male ,Anemia, Hemolytic ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,medicine.drug_class ,Cephalosporin ,Antibiotics ,Pneumonia, Aspiration ,Hemolysis ,Gastroenterology ,Internal medicine ,polycyclic compounds ,medicine ,Cephaloridine ,Humans ,Intravascular haemolysis ,Cephalexin ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,bacterial infections and mycoses ,medicine.disease ,Cephalosporins ,Surgery ,Acute Disease ,business ,Research Article ,medicine.drug - Abstract
CEPHALEXIN, a new semi-synthetic antibiotic derived from cephalosporin C, has the same basic nucleus and the same range of activity as its predecessors, cephalothin and cephaloridine but has the advantage that it can be given orally. As this drug is relatively new, few side-effects have been described. The following case report is of a boy, aged 14 years, who developed acute intravascular haemolysis while taking cephalexin.
- Published
- 1972
- Full Text
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44. Hæmorrhagic Diseases in Surgery
- Author
-
Douglas As and G. P. McNicol
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Fibrinolysis ,Medicine ,Aprotinin ,Surgery operative ,Aminocaproic acid ,business ,Kallikrein-Trypsin Inactivator ,medicine.drug ,Surgery - Published
- 1965
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Measurement during Fibrinolytic Therapy
- Author
-
G. P. McNicol
- Subjects
business.industry ,Streptokinase ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Clot retraction ,Pharmacology ,Fibrinogen ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Platelet adhesiveness ,Immunology ,Fibrinolysis ,medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Fibrinolytic therapy ,030223 otorhinolaryngology ,business ,Fibrinolytic agent ,medicine.drug ,Blood coagulation test - Published
- 1969
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. The effects of long-term therapy with oestriol succinate on the haemostatic mechanism in postmenopausal women
- Author
-
J. L. Toy, J. A. Davies, and G. P. Mcnicol
- Subjects
Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Platelet Aggregation ,Osteoporosis ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Platelet ,Long term therapy ,Hemostasis ,Coagulation function ,business.industry ,Estriol ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Plasminogen ,Succinates ,Haemostatic function ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Menopause ,Endocrinology ,Coagulation ,Female ,Serum Globulins ,business ,hormones, hormone substitutes, and hormone antagonists - Abstract
In a previous report we showed that oestriol succinate administered to postmenopausal women caused fewer changes in haemostatic function over a four-month period than ethinyloestradiol. Potential longer-term effects were studied in postmenopausal women treated for osteoporosis with oestriol succinate for up to 12 months. Over this period there was no significant change in concentration of plasma coagulation factors, an increase in plasminogen concentration and euglobulin lysis activity, and an inconsistent increase in platelet sensitivity to aggregation induced by ADP and collagen. The relative lack of effect of oestriol succinate on coagulation function is encouraging with regard to the future incidence of thromboembolic complications of therapy.
- Published
- 1978
47. The Value of Drugs that Modify Platelet and Vessel Wall Function for the Clinical Complications of Atherosclerosis
- Author
-
G. P. McNicol
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Aspirin ,business.industry ,Controlled studies ,medicine.disease ,Clinical trial ,Dipyridamole ,In vivo ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Cardiology ,Platelet ,Myocardial infarction ,business ,Beneficial effects ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The purpose of this paper is to review briefly the clinical trials in which an attempt has been made to identify beneficial effects on the complications of atherosclerosis of drugs that are thought to modify platelet and vessel wall function. The paper is restricted to consideration of aspirin, dipyridamole (Persantine) and sulphinpyrazone (Anturan), the only drugs with which large scale, prospective, controlled studies have been carried out. For the purpose of this paper it will be assumed that these drugs modify platelet and or vessel wall function in vivo in man.
- Published
- 1980
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Viscosity, haematocrit, fibrinogen and plasma proteins in maternal and cord blood
- Author
-
M. E. Foley, G. P. McNicol, and D. M. Isherwood
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Cord ,Fibrinogen ,Viscosity ,Pregnancy ,Internal medicine ,Medicine ,Humans ,Poise ,Whole blood ,Labor, Obstetric ,business.industry ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Liter ,Blood Proteins ,Blood Viscosity ,Fetal Blood ,Blood proteins ,Endocrinology ,Hematocrit ,Immunoglobulin M ,Cord blood ,Female ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The viscosity at low shear rate of whole blood, plasma and serum, the haematocrit, plasma fibrinogen, plasma proteins, and IgM were measured in maternal and cord blood immediately following delivery. The whole blood viscosity in maternal blood (mean 19.96 +/- 3.74 centipoise or c/p) was similar to cord blood viscosity (mean 19.44 +/- 4.28 c/p). The mean haematocrit in maternal blood (0.385 +/- 0.026) was significantly lower than the cord haematocrit (0.488 +/- 0.39). Mean plasma viscosity (1.86 +/- 0.47 c/p) and plasma fibrinogen (4.25 +/- 0.75 g/litre) in maternal blood were significantly higher than cord plasma viscosity (1.12 +/- 0.19 c/p) and cord plasma fibrinogen (1.81 +/- 0.61 g/l). Mean serum viscosity (1.22 +/- 0.28 c/p) and mean IgM levels (2.38 +/- 0.36 g/l) in maternal blood were significantly higher than cord serum viscosity (0.90 +/- 0.15 c/p) and cord IgM (0.48 +/- 0.06 g/l). The low low levels of IgM and fibrinogen may protect the fetus from the increased viscosity that could be expected in association with a high haematocrit.
- Published
- 1978
49. Conventional uses of heparin
- Author
-
G P, McNicol
- Subjects
Clinical Trials as Topic ,Heparin ,Animals ,Anticoagulants ,Drug Evaluation ,Humans ,Arterial Occlusive Diseases ,Coronary Disease ,Streptokinase ,Thrombophlebitis ,Pulmonary Embolism ,Urokinase-Type Plasminogen Activator ,Snake Venoms - Published
- 1975
50. Prostaglandins And Uterine Bleeding
- Author
-
R.C. Paton, S Moncada, J A Salmon, J A Davies, C F Goodfellow, and G P McNicol
- Subjects
Gynecology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Uterine bleeding ,Medicine ,business - Abstract
There is little information about haemostatic function in the uterus in relation to menstrual bleeding. We measured platelet count and platelet retention in glass-bead columns, and plasma levels of FPA, TxB2 and 6-oxo-PGF1α in samples taken simultaneously from uterine vein (UV) and peripheral vein (PV) in 18 women (2 post-menopausal) undergoing hysterectomy. Platelet counts and FPA concentrations were similar in both sets of samples. Plasma levels of 6-oxo- PGF1α were significantly (p
- Published
- 1981
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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