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| The first 150 words of the full text of this article appear below. |
The term thrombophilia describes an increased tendency to
clinical thrombosis associated with laboratory evidence of abnormal haemostasis. Causes include inherited deficiencies of natural anticoagulants (antithrombin, protein C, and protein S), polymorphisms causing resistance to activated protein C (factor V Leiden mutation) or
disturbing the normal proclot or anticlot balance (prothrombin G20210A
mutation), and disorders which are polygenic or interact with dietary
and environmental factors (high factor VIII and hyperhomocysteinaemia). Inherited thrombophilias, most commonly factor V Leiden and high VIII,
are risk factors in most cases of venous thromboembolism under the age
of 40.1 It is therefore tempting to assume that a similar
relation will be found in arterial thrombosis, especially as stroke in
young people often remains unexplained even after extensive
investigation of other possible causes. In the previous issue of this
Journal, pp 508
511 Ganesan et al described
a prospective case-control study of 60 children with arterial ischaemic
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