Abstract
Various components of the coagulation and fibrinolytic pathways are involved in normal embryonic implantation, trophoblast invasion, placentation, and recurrent miscarriages are characterized by defective placentation and microthrombi in the placental vasculature. Although recurrent miscarriage is a heterogeneous condition the relationship between abnormalities in the haemostatic pathways and pregnancy outcome is increasingly recognized. The challenge we face is how to discriminate between women who are destined to miscarry from those whose pregnancy will be successful. Considering the crucial role of thrombomodulin and tissue factor in coagulation and in embryonic development, we have performed a study using specific assays for thrombomodulin, tissue factor activity and procoagulant phospholipids in association with other parameters in 30 early (under 12weeks) and 32 late (over 22weeks) pregnancy loss women and compared them with 62 normal pregnancy women and 35 non-pregnant women. Plasma levels of tissue factor activity, thrombomodulin activity, and procoagulant phospholipids were significantly higher in patients than in control subjects. In addition the tissue factor activity/free tissue factor pathway inhibitor ratio was higher in patients than in controls. Interestingly, patients with late pregnancy loss had higher tissue factor activity/free tissue factor pathway inhibitor ratios than patients with early pregnancy loss. The combinations of these different parameters reveal an increase in procoagulant activity which could be secondary to endothelial damage or coagulation activation and then are involved in the pathogenesis of pregnancy loss. Their simultaneous measurement of these activities might provide a new tool to assess the prognosis of pregnancy loss.
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