Severe Wound Healing Impairment in a Patient with Dysfibrinogenaemia

  • van Vulpen, Lize F D
  • Amin, Shwan N
  • Makris, Michael
Publication date
February 2018

Abstract

Fibrinogen has a principal role in blood clot formation. It is a soluble protein that is converted to fibrin and polymerizes into insoluble fibrin fibres forming a clot-stabilizing network. This is further strengthened by activated factor XIII (FXIIIa) via cross-linking and incorporation of α2-antiplasmin and thrombin activatable fibrinolysis inhibitor (TAFI). Fibrinogen is synthesized in hepatocytes and composed of three pairs of different polypeptide chains (Aα, Bβ, γ), interconnected via disulphide bridges. Each chain is encoded by a single gene (FGA, FGB and FGG). In congenital dysfibrinogenaemia, a qualitative defect is caused by mutations within any of these genes. According to the online database of dysfibrinogenaemias, 1,215 cases a...

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