Abstract
An otherwise healthy woman developed a hemorrhagic diathesis with fluctuating clinical symptoms and laboratory findings, but without thrombocytopenia, over 8 years. In periods of bad clinical condition, a platelet defect, characteristic of thrombasthenia, was found. In contrast to classic thrombasthenia, electrophoresis of the patient's platelet membranes revealed normal amounts of glycoproteins IIb alpha, IIb beta, and IIIa in the normal positions. Monoclonal antibodies, specific for GPIIIa and GPIIb/IIIa, respectively, bound normally to the P1A1-positive platelets from the patient. Although no antibody and no platelet function inhibitor were evident in the autologous plasma, an IgG1 antibody that was bound to the patient's platelets and was directed against GPIIb/IIIa could be demonstrated. After elution from the patient's platelets, this antibody immunoprecipitated GPIIb (both subunits), IIIa, and a 200-kilodalton (kd) band (probably undissociated GPIIb/IIIa complex) from solubilized normal platelets, but did not react with thrombasthenic platelets. Adding the eluate from the patient's platelets to normal platelet-rich plasma immediately caused concentration-dependent inhibition of adenosine diphosphate (ADP)-induced and collagen-induced aggregation and also strong inhibition of ADP-stimulated fibrinogen binding. Because it was very unlikely from the patient's medical history that the antibody was caused by alloimmunization, the hemorrhagic diathesis must be interpreted as acquired thrombasthenia due to an anti-GPIIb/IIIa autoantibody.
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