Factor V Leiden – what are the signs and symptoms of Factor V Leiden?

Factor V Leiden

Factor V Leiden

Introduction

Thrombophilia is where the blood has an increased tendency to form clots.

It’s not a condition or a disorder itself, and is sometimes associated with blood clots (venous thromboses) that are caused by genetic changes (mutations).

If you have thrombophilia, you’re more likely to develop a blood clot in one of the large veins in your leg. This is known as deep vein thrombosis (DVT).

It’s important to be aware of the signs of a DVT, such as unexplained pain, swelling or tenderness in your leg (usually in your calf). See your GP as soon as possible if you have these symptoms (see below).

The blood clotting process

When you cut yourself, the bleeding usually triggers a number of chemical reactions in the blood.

The chemical reactions cause a blood clot to form, which sticks to the injured part of the blood vessel along with blood cells called platelets.

Clotting substances, known as clotting factors, help control bleeding and work with platelets to ensure the blood clots effectively.

However, in thrombophilia, there’s an imbalance in clotting chemicals and a person with the disorder either has too much clotting factor, or too little of the substance that prevents clotting.

Types of thrombophilia

There are many different types of thrombophilia. Some of the main types are outlined below.

Factor V Leiden

Factor V Leiden is a type of thrombophilia caused by a specific gene mutation.

It’s the most common type of inherited thrombophilia, with 3-8% of Europeans having one copy of the factor V Leiden mutation in each cell, and about one in 5,000 people having two copies of the mutation. It’s less common in other populations.

If you have Factor V Leiden, your risk of developing a DVT is increased (see above). There’s also a higher risk of blood clots breaking away from their original location and travelling to other areas of your body through your bloodstream.

This can be particularly serious if the blood clot becomes stuck in the main artery of your lungs (the pulmonary artery). This is known as a pulmonary embolism and it can be life-threatening (see below).

Prothrombin 20210 mutation

Prothrombin 20210 mutation, also known as Factor II mutation, is another genetic blood disorder that increases the risk of clots.

Prothrombin is a protein in the blood which helps it to clot (thicken). However, in some people, a mutation in the gene that produces prothrombin causes too much to be produced, resulting in an increased tendency for blood clots, such as DVTs, to form.

As with Factor V Leiden, prothrombin 20210 is more common in white people, particularly Europeans.

Protein C, protein S or antithrombin deficiency

Protein C, protein S, and antithrombin are natural anticoagulants (substances that prevent the blood from clotting).

If you have low levels of these anticoagulants, or if they don’t work properly, your risk of developing a DVT or pulmonary embolism is increased.

Problems with protein C, protein S or antithrombin can be inherited but are rare.

Antiphospholipid syndrome

Antiphospholipid syndrome, also known as Hughes syndrome, is an immune system disorder that increases the risk of blood clots.

Your body produces antibodies that attack phospholipids, a fat molecule thought to keep blood at the right consistency.

The antibodies bind to the phospholipids, increasing your risk of a blood clot developing in a vein or artery.

Symptoms of thrombophilia

Thrombophilia is often mild and many people don’t experience any health problems. Symptoms will only occur if the disorder causes a blood clot.

People with thrombophilia are particularly at risk of developing a DVT.

Warning signs of a DVT include:

pain, swelling and tenderness in one of your legs (usually your calf)

a heavy ache in the affected area

warm skin in the area of the clot

redness of your skin, particularly at the back of your leg below the knee

DVT usually, although not always, affects one leg. The pain may be worse when you bend your foot up towards your knee.

Part of the blood clot can sometimes break away and travel through the bloodstream. This is known as an embolism.

Embolisms can be dangerous if they become lodged in the lungs (pulmonary embolism). This is a serious and potentially life-threatening condition because it can prevent blood from reaching your lungs.

The symptoms of a pulmonary embolism are:

chest or upper back pain

shortness of breath

coughing – usually dry but you may cough up blood or mucus containing blood

feeling lightheaded or dizzy

fainting

See your GP immediately if you experience any combination of the above symptoms. Alternatively, you can call NHS 111 or contact your local out-of-hours service for advice. Dial 999 to request an ambulance if your symptoms are severe.

Diagnosing thrombophilia

Thrombophilia testing isn’t routinely carried out on everyone who has a blood clot.

Testing for inherited thrombophilia in people with venous thrombosis isn’t usually needed because the results don’t usually influence clinical decisions.

For example, decisions regarding the length of treatment should be made by taking into consideration whether or not venous thrombosis was provoked, whether other risk factors are present, and the risk of bleeding due to treatment with anticoagulants, regardless of whether inherited thrombophilia is present or not.

Thrombophilia is diagnosed by having blood tests weeks or months after your blood clot. The tests look for anticoagulant deficiencies. Before having the tests, you’ll usually have to wait until you’ve stopped taking anticoagulant medicine, such as warfarin, for four to six weeks.

If the blood test results indicate you have thrombophilia, you may be referred to a haematologist (a specialist in diagnosing and treating blood disorders).

Treating thrombophilia

Treatment may not be needed if you have mild thrombophilia.

If you develop a blood clot, you’ll need treatment for the blood clot and treatment to prevent further clots. You may need to take warfarin tablets or have an injection of heparin.

Warfarin and heparin

Warfarin and heparin are anticoagulants . They interfere with the clotting process and are commonly used to treat or prevent DVT and pulmonary embolisms.

If you need an anticoagulant to prevent a clot, you’ll be prescribed warfarin. It will take a few days to work properly.

If you need instant treatment for an existing clot, you’ll usually be given a heparin injection (which works straight away), as well as warfarin tablets for the first few days. The injection will either be given in hospital or at home.

A heparin injection may also be given to people with antiphospholipid syndrome, before and after surgery or during pregnancy. Unlike warfarin, heparin is safe to take in pregnancy.

International Normalised Ratio (INR) test

Your doctor will need to adjust your warfarin dose so your blood doesn’t clot easily, but isn’t too high to put you at risk of bleeding problems.

You’ll need to have a regular blood test called the International Normalised Ratio (INR) to measure your blood clotting ability while taking warfarin.

You’ll have the INR test less frequently once your ideal dose has been reached (an INR of two to three is usually the aim).

Lifestyle advice

If you have thrombophilia, it’s important you’re aware of the symptoms of a blood clot (see above), and that you see your GP immediately if you think you have one.

You should also take the following precautions to lower your risk of blood clots:

lose weight if you’re overweight

stop smoking if you smoke

eat a healthy, balanced diet and exercise regularly

avoid being immobile for long periods because this can cause a DVT (read more about preventing DVT)

If you’re pregnant, or planning to get pregnant, discuss this with your GP and inform the midwife and obstetrician about your condition.

You may need to take low-dose aspirin or an anticoagulant medicine while you’re pregnant to prevent problems occurring during pregnancy or miscarriage.

If you’re having a major operation, make sure you tell the healthcare professionals treating you about your condition. You may need a heparin injection to prevent a blood clot forming.

Women with thrombophilia should avoid taking the combined oral contraceptive pill or hormone replacement therapy (HRT) because they’ll further increase your risk of developing a blood clot.

World Thrombosis Day Shines Spotlight on Deadly Blood Clots – Read our interview with Dr Hillary Jones on Deep Vein Thrombosis


Dr Hilary Jones on Thrombosis

Dr Hilary Jones on Thrombosis

Last Monday 13th October saw World Thrombosis Day 2014.  To mark the day we conducted an interview with Dr Hilary Jones on the subject of Thrombosis.

But did you you know this seven important facts about thrombosis?

1) Sitting at a desk, in a car, or a train for just a 90 minute period of time can reduce blood flow behind the knee by 50%, increasing the risk of thrombosis – a blood clot
2) Other risk factors: Major surgery, such as orthopaedic or surgery for cancer, or extended time in the hospital, heart diseases, pregnancy, smoking, hormone therapy, being overweight/obesity, dehydration, family history and cancer
3) Deep vein thrombosis (a blood clot in the leg) or a pulmonary embolism (a blood clot in the lung) kills one person every 37 seconds in the western world (1,2) – in England more than one in 1,000 adults could be affected by blood clots every year (3)
4) Blood clots can also travel to the brain causing strokes. These types of clots occur in people who have atrial fibrillation (an irregular heartbeat) – a condition which affects over one million people in England (4)
5) New data reveals that 75% of people in the UK wouldn’t know what to expect if they experienced a blood clot in the lungs (5) – highlighting the need to raise awareness of the signs and symptoms of thrombosis



6) itting at a desk, in a car, or a train for just a 90 minute period of time can increase the risk of thrombosis – a blood clot
7) There are a number of effective treatment options available to treat and prevent blood clots

The interview was conducted bu Antonia Lipinski on behalf of PatientTalk.Org.

Lipinski So what actually is DVT and why is it so dangerous?
DR JONES Well DVT stands for Deep Vein Thrombosis. This means that a blood clot forms in the veins which lie deep in the tissues of the body and this particularly affects the calf muscle veins. When people complain of pain and tenderness in the calf with swelling and redness it could be that they’ve got Deep Vein Thrombosis. The significance of Deep Vein Thrombosis is this that it is a very common disorder and it can have far reaching consequences. If a piece of the blood clot should break off into the circulation and be carried onwards towards the heart and lungs its means its can cause a pulmonary embolism. That is part of a clot that has broken off and has lodged in the lungs obstructing the oxygenising of blood and that can have very serious consequences and leads to a fair number of deaths every year.
Lipinski Who can get it?
DR JONES Well all most anybody can suffer from deep vein thrombosis. We know that it is more common with age but a young person who has had an injury, somebody who is having surgery, somebody is pregnant and somebody with a family history or a previous history of blood clots because some people have a genetic predisposition towards forming clots in the blood. All of these people, people who smoke even are more prone to blood clots so nobody is immune from blood clots and every 37 seconds one person in the Western world dies from a blood clot so that’s how significant it is.
Lipinski How is it treated?
DR JONES Well we know that we can to some extent we can prevent blood clots in people before it has actually happened. For example if somebody is having surgery we use compression stockings to increase the blood flow through the veins and prevent the stasis which occurs during the operation but more often then not somebody who has a deep vein thrombosis or pulmonary embolism we prevent further occurrences. We treat them. We anti coagulate them. PATIENTTALK.ORG Do flight socks actually work?
DR JONES Yes if they are up to the back of the knee and they are compressing the veins significantly. When someone is on a long haul flight, just as any kind of inactivity would do, it increases the blood flow through the veins and prevents the risk of blood clots so they really do help just as they do in a hospital setting or in anyone who is inactive and immobile for several hours at a time.
Lipinski How is PE different from DVT?
DR JONES Well a pulmonary embolism is where the blood clot breaks off from the leg and is carried up towards the lungs and blocks an artery which the feeds the lung with blood that is ready to be oxygenated. So somebody with a pulmonary embolism will be short of breath. They’ll have chest pain. They’ll have an increased heart rate. They might even cough up some blood and feel light headed. Also they might have no symptoms at all in the early stage as my brother didn’t when he had multiple pulmonary embolisms. Now he is a fit guy. He is an oarsman who rows to a very high standard and he had an abnormal collection of blood vessels in his thigh which he didn’t know about and he wondered why he was a bit more breathless when he was ain a rowing race. He saw a friend who happened to be a cardiologist who recognised the signs straight away. He was treated successfully and those abnormal blood vessels were removed. As I say anyone can be affected and the pulmonary embolism is much more serious because in many cases it can prove fatal if not treated quickly.
Lipinski What lifestyle changes can we make to prevent DVT?
DR JONES I think the first thing is to stop smoking because this thickens the blood and makes it stickier so blood clots are more likely to form. So giving up smoking is a really good step forward. Losing weight or normalising weight so you are not carrying too much weight is good. Reporting any kind of injury around the calf muscle particularly is important. Exercising on a regular basis because when you are using your leg muscles they are pumping and compressing in a rhythmically way the blood vessels underneath the muscle so the muscle pump is a good way of preventing blood clots and improving blood flow. So exercise, giving up smoking and just taking care of yourself are all important, normalising weight, these are all important. Probably nothing more so then recognising the signs and symptoms of DVT. It would be pain and tenderness in the calf, swelling of the ankle and foot, redness in this area, dilution of the surface veins so the veins look more prominent and an increased warmth compared to the other side. It always a good to compare the affected leg to the other side and if you have any doubts at all go and see your doctor and say could this be a DVT.

 

Further regional statistics on people diagnosed with DVT and PE in England 2010/11 can be found at: http://www.hscic.gov.uk/hes

 

References

1. Cohen AT et al. Thromb Haemost. 2007; 98 (4):756-764;

2. Roger VL et al. Circulation. 2012; 125(1):e2-e220

3. From prevention to treatment; taking the pulse of NHS services. Bayer HealthCare. November 2013

4. AF Association, A Guide to AF within the Cardiovascular Disease Outcomes Strategy. December 2013

5. Data on file Bayer HealthCare. Global online survey conducted in over 20,000 adults aged 18-64 between 17th July-11th August 2014. UK sample size 1,000 adults

6. International Society on Thrombosis and Haemostasis. World Thrombosis Day. Available at: http://www.worldthrombosisday.org/ Last accessed October 2014

7. Patient UK. Deep vein thrombosis. Available at: http://www.patient.co.uk/health/deep-vein-thrombosis-leaflet Last accessed October 2014

8. Turpie AGG et al. BMJ. 2002; 325: 887-890

9. NHS Choices. Causes of deep vein thrombosis. Available at: http://www.nhs.uk/Conditions/Deep-vein-thrombosis/Pages/Causes.aspx Last accessed October 2014

10. Mayo Clinic. Deep vein thrombosis. Available at: http://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/deep-vein-thrombosis/basics/symptoms/con-20031922 Last accessed October 2014

11. Life Blood, the Thrombosis Charity. Reducing the Risk of Thrombosis. http://www.thrombosis-charity.org.uk/perch/resources/1399925355-reducing-the-risk-of-e-thrombosis-crystalmark-feb-2013.pdf