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Heightened Interaction between Platelets and Factor VIII/von Willebrand Factor in a New Subtype of von Willebrand's Disease

List of authors.
  • Zaverio M. Ruggeri, M.D.,
  • Franco I. Pareti, M.D.,
  • Pier Mannuccio Mannucci, M.D.,
  • Nicola Ciavarella, M.D.,
  • and Theodore S. Zimmerman, M.D.

Abstract

The form of von Willebrand's disease characterized by a qualitative abnormality of Factor VIII/von Willebrand factor (FVIII/vWF) in plasma has been designated as Type II. We have now identified 20 persons from five families whose qualitatively abnormal FVIII/vWF shows heightened responsiveness to ristocetin. We have classified this form of the disease as Type IIB and reclassified as Type IIA the form previously described as Type II, in which the interaction of the abnormal FVIII/vWF with platelets is decreased or absent in the presence of ristocetin. The enhanced reactivity of FVIII/vWF in Type IIB was evident in studies of ristocetin-induced platelet agglutination and of binding of FVIII/vWF to platelets in the presence of ristocetin. In both Type IIA and IIB, crossed immunoelectrophoresis of plasma FVIII/vWF demonstrated similar absence of the larger, less anodic forms. These findings suggest that ristocetin-mediated interactions between platelets and FVIII/vWF do not accurately reflect the "bleeding-time" (von Willebrand factor) defect in this newly described subtype of von Willebrand's disease.

Funding and Disclosures

Supported by a grant from Fondazione Angelo Bianchi Bonomi, Milan, Italy, and by grants (HL-15491 and HL-16411) from the National Institutes of Health. Dr. Ruggeri was supported in part by Fondazione Floriani, Milan, Italy.

A preliminary report of this work was presented at the annual meeting of the American Society for Clinical Investigation, Washington, D.C., May 1979. (Clin Res. 1979; 27:464A.).

This is publication no. 1853 from the Immunology Departments of the Research Institute of Scripps Clinic.

We are indebted to Rossella Bader, Raffaella Coppola, Rossana Lombardi, and Jim Roberts for technical assistance.

Author Affiliations

From the Hemophilia and Thrombosis Centre ("Angelo Bianchi Bonomi") of the University of Milan, 3rd Department of Internal Medicine, Policlinico Hospital, Milan, Italy, and the Department of Molecular Immunology, the Research Institute of Scripps Clinic, La Jolla, Calif. (address reprint requests to Dr. Ruggeri at the Department of Molecular Immunology, Research Institute of Scripps Clinic, 10666 N. Torrey Pines Road, La Jolla, CA 92037).

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