Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Sylvia Handler is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Sylvia Handler.


Circulation | 1997

Morning Hypercoagulability and Hypofibrinolysis Diurnal Variations in Circulating Activated Factor VII, Prothrombin Fragment F1+2, and Plasmin–Plasmin Inhibitor Complex

Stylianos Kapiotis; Bernd Jilma; Peter Quehenberger; Katharina Ruzicka; Sylvia Handler; Wolfgang Speiser

BACKGROUND Diurnal fluctuations of blood coagulation and fibrinolysis activity are thought to play a role in the observed circadian variation in the frequency of onset of acute cardiovascular events. In the present study, the diurnal variations in blood coagulation and fibrinolysis activity were investigated in 10 young, healthy control subjects by use of specific molecular activation markers. METHODS AND RESULTS The plasma levels of activated factor FVII (FVIIa), the active portion of the main coagulation activator, decreased during the day (8 AM: 2.03 ng/mL, CI 1.16 to 2.88 ng/mL; 8 PM: 1.16 ng/mL, CI 0.81 to 1.5 ng/mL; P = .005), whereas FVII antigen did not change significantly. In parallel with the diurnal variations of FVIIa, we found a decrease of prothrombin fragment F1+2 (8 AM: 0.97 nmol/L, CI 0.79 to 1.15 nmol/L; 8 PM: 0.78 nmol/L, CI 0.64 to 0.93 nmol/L; P = .005), a molecular marker of intravasal thrombin generation. Evidence for a possible functional relevance of circulating FVIIa was found because this parameter was significantly correlated with prothrombin fragment F1+2 in 72 fasting healthy individuals (r = .29, P = .011). Plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 levels decreased (8 AM: 9.9 ng/mL, CI 7.7 to 12.1 ng/mL; 8 PM: 5.4 ng/mL, CI 3.8 to 6.9 ng/mL; P < .005), whereas plasmin-plasmin inhibitor complex levels, representing the degree of intravascular plasmin generation, concomitantly increased (8 AM: 235 micrograms/L, CI 198 to 272 micrograms/L; 8 PM: 449 micrograms/L, CI 391 to 507 micrograms/L; P = .008). CONCLUSIONS Our data suggest that the diurnal changes in the plasma levels of activators and inhibitors of coagulation and fibrinolysis lead to corresponding changes in the activity state of these systems, leading to morning hypercoagulability and hypofibrinolysis.


Thrombosis Research | 2001

A Common C→T Polymorphism at nt 46 in the Promoter Region of Coagulation Factor XII is Associated With Decreased Factor XII Activity

Georg Endler; Markus Exner; Christine Mannhalter; Susanne Meier; Katharina Ruzicka; Sylvia Handler; Simon Panzer; Oswald Wagner; Peter Quehenberger

Coagulation factor XII (FXII) deficiency is rarely found to be associated with bleeding, but single reports demonstrated thromboembolic events in FXII-deficient patients. Currently, the biological role of FXII is still discussed controversially. It is well known that plasma levels of FXII show great interindividual variability. Recently, it has been demonstrated that a frequently occurring C-->T polymorphism in the FXII promoter region at nucleotide (nt) 46 is associated with lower plasma FXII activity levels in Orientals. In our study, we evaluated the frequency of this polymorphism in a randomly selected sample of newborns and investigated whether this C-->T polymorphism also contributes to the frequently observed moderate FXII deficiency in Europeans. We developed a new mutagenically separated polymerase chain reaction assay (MS PCR), which allows mutation detection without the use of restriction enzymes. Among 100 healthy newborns, we found 64% homozygous carriers of the wildtype FXII 46C allele, 29% were heterozygous for FXII C46T, and 7% homozygous for FXII 46T. Evaluation of plasma FXII activity and genotype in 80 randomly selected and unrelated individuals revealed a highly statistically significant (P<.001) association of the FXII 46T allele with reduced FXII plasma activity. Individuals carrying the homozygous FXII 46C genotype had a mean of 1.17 U/ml (+/-0.31 U/ml), individuals heterozygous for FXII C46T showed a mean of 0.70 U/ml (+/-0.31 U/ml), and subjects homozygous for FXII 46T had only 0.44 U/ml (+/-0.10 U/ml) plasma FXII activity.


Thrombosis Research | 2001

Results of a new rapid d-dimer assay (cardiac d-dimer) in the diagnosis of deep vein thrombosis.

Robert A. Bucek; Peter Quehenberger; Ines Feliks; Sylvia Handler; Markus Reiter; Erich Minar

The objective was to evaluate the accuracy of a new full blood rapid D-dimer assay in the diagnosis of suspected deep vein thrombosis (DVT). In 100 consecutive patients with suspected DVT, clinical probability was staged according to a pretest score proposed by Wells. For the determination of plasma D-dimer, heparin and citrate blood samples were drawn, and Cardiac D-dimer, STA-LIA, and Tina-quant tests were performed. Final diagnosis was confirmed either by duplex sonography or ascending venography. DVT was diagnosed in 37%, thrombophlebitis in 10%, and no venous thromboembolism was diagnosed in 52%. In 2% pulmonary embolism was detected and one patient was dismissed before final diagnosis. Cardiac D-dimer assay from citrate tubes showed a sensitivity of 88.6%, a specificity of 54%, a positive predictive value of 57.4%, and a negative predictive value of 87.1%. Nearly identical results were observed with heparin tubes. Corresponding results were 88.6%, 48%, 52.5%, and 85.7% for STA-LIA and 88.6%, 46%, 53.4%, and 85.2% for Tina-quant, respectively. In conclusion, we can say that Cardiac D-dimer is a rapid, whole blood assay with a great potential for clinical use. It can help in diagnosing DVT from citrate as well as heparin tubes with comparable sensitivity, specificity, positive and negative predictive values as STA-LIA and Tina-quant tests.


Clinica Chimica Acta | 2001

Multicentre evaluation of a new point-of-care test for the quantitative determination of D-dimer

Carl-Erik Dempfle; Marc Schraml; Ingo Besenthal; Roland Hansen; Jochen Gehrke; Wolfgang Korte; Martin Risch; Peter Quehenberger; Sylvia Handler; Erich Minar; Ilse Schulz; Rainer Zerback

Imprecision studies, interference testing and multicentre method comparisons using patient samples were carried out with of a new point-of-care test for D-dimer (CARDIAC D-Dimer). The CV of the within-series and the day-to-day imprecision with blood samples and control materials were between 7% and 13%. Compared with Tina-quant D-Dimer, CARDIAC D-Dimer showed a good correlation and accuracy (n=353; r=0.91; y=1.06x-0.03), compared with STA LIATEST D-Dimer some poorer accuracy (n=304; r=0.91; y=1.12x-0.03). No interference was detected for different hematocrit values (16% to 51%) and in investigations with hemoglobin (up to 0.13 mmol/l), biotin (up to 30 microg/l), bilirubin (up to 340 micromol/l), intralipid (up to 31.1 mmol/l) and rheumatic factor (up to 79 IU/ml). Overdosing or underdosing by 10 microl did not affect the test result. The diagnostic sensitivity of CARDIAC D-Dimer for the detection of acute venous thromboembolic diseases was 100% in our study. With CARDIAC D-Dimer reliable quantitative D-dimer results can be easily obtained. Because of the good analytical and clinical agreement with Tina-quant D-Dimer, it should be suitable for ruling out venous thromboembolic diseases.


Clinical Pharmacology & Therapeutics | 2002

Acenocoumarol decreases tissue factor–dependent coagulation during systemic inflammation in humans

Ursula Hollenstein; Monika Homoncik; P. Knöbl; Thomas Pernerstorfer; Johann Graggaber; Hans-Georg Eichler; Sylvia Handler; Bernd Jilma

Coumarin derivatives are still widely used for prophylaxis of thromboembolic events and therefore represent important comparator substances for new anticoagulants. Measurement of the efficacy of such novel compounds in a human coagulation model with adequate biomarkers could be useful for early‐phase clinical drug development. To evaluate the applicability of a well‐established model of tissue factor‐dependent coagulation for defining anticoagulant potency, we investigated the effects of acenocoumarol in experimental human endotoxemia.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2002

Effect of Factor X Inhibition on Coagulation Activation and Cytokine Induction in Human Systemic Inflammation

Ursula Hollenstein; Thomas Pernerstorfer; Monika Homoncik; John B. Hansen; Haike Finzen; Sylvia Handler; Bernd Jilma

Anticoagulants have gained increasing attention in the treatment of sepsis. This study used danaparoid to investigate the role of factor Xa in endotoxin-induced coagulation and inflammation and its effectiveness when coagulation activation has already occurred. Thirty healthy volunteers were enrolled in the randomized, placebo-controlled trial. Subjects received 2 ng/kg endotoxin and danaparoid 10 min or 3 h thereafter or placebo. Endotoxin increased prothrombin fragment 1+2 (F(1+2)) levels from 0.5 to 7.0 nmol/L at 5 h in the placebo group. Early danaparoid infusion inhibited endotoxin-induced thrombin formation: maximum F(1+2) levels reached only 1.8 nmol/L (P<.01, vs. baseline or placebo). Delayed danaparoid infusion effectively blocked further thrombin formation. However, danaparoid did not alter endotoxin-induced changes in the fibrinolytic system, cytokine levels, activation of leukocytes, or tissue factor expression on monocytes. Danaparoid therefore selectively attenuates endotoxin-induced coagulopathy, even with delayed administration when coagulation activation is well under way.


Thrombosis Research | 1997

EVALUATION OF BEDSIDE PROTHROMBIN TIME AND ACTIVATED PARTIAL THROMBOPLASTIN TIME MEASUREMENT BY COAGULATION ANALYZER COAGUCHECK PLUS® IN VARIOUS CLINICAL SETTINGS

Katharina Ruzicka; Stylianos Kapiotis; Peter Quehenberger; Sylvia Handler; Stephan Hornykewycz; Albert Michitsch; Kurt Huber; Dejaco Clemens; Meghdadi Susan; Ingrid Pabinger; Sabine Eichinger; Bernd Jilma; Wolfgang Speiser

In the present study CoaguCheck Plus (CCP), a coagulation test system using whole blood, was evaluated with respect to its comparability with widely distributed conventional routine coagulation assays. A correlation of r = 0.997 (p < 0.0001) was found between INR of CCP-prothrombin time (CCP-PT) and Thrombotest (KC-1 analyzer) in patients on oral anticoagulant therapy. A correlation of r = 0.899 (p < 0.001) between CCP-aPTT and Actin ES aPTT (STA analyzer) was found in heparinized patients. Impaired hepatic hepatic coagulation factor synthesis in liver cirrhosis patients was detected by CCP-PT with a sensitivity of 0.75 and by Normotest (STA analyzer) with a sensitivity of 0.92. Those patients with normal CCP-PT values and liver disease had, only mild reductions (> 30% of normals) in coagulation factors II, V, VII or X. CCP-aPTT was also performed in patients with a deficiency in the so called endogenous coagulation factors VIII, IX, XI and XII. CCP-aPTT showed a sensitivity similar to that of Actin FS aPTT in the detection even of mild deficiencies in factors VIII, IX and XII; factor XI deficiency was however detected only in patients with severe (< 12% of normals) disease; lupus anticoagulants were detected with a high sensitivity.


Thrombosis and Haemostasis | 2004

High plasma heparin cofactor II activity protects from restenosis after femoropopliteal stenting

Martin Schillinger; Markus Exner; Schila Sabeti; Wolfgang Mlekusch; Jasmin Amighi; Sylvia Handler; Peter Quehenberger; Neda Kalifeh; Oswald Wagner; Erich Minar

High heparin cofactor II (HCII) activity has recently been described to protect from coronary instent restenosis, presumably by inactivating thrombin in injured arteries. In this study, we investigated the association of HCII activity and restenosis after femoropopliteal stenting. We studied 63 consecutive patients with peripheral artery disease who underwent femoropopliteal stent implantation after initial failure of plain balloon angioplasty due to a significant residual stenosis (>30% lumen diameter reduction) or a flow limiting dissection. HCII activity was measured before stenting and patients were followed for median 10 months (interquartile range 6 to 17) for the occurrence of a first instent restenosis, defined as a >50% lumen diameter reduction by color coded duplex sonography and confirmed by angiography. Cumulative freedom from restenosis at 6 and 12 months in patients with lower HCII activity (100%, lower tertile, n=20) was 84% and 35% as compared to 93% and 72% in patients with high HCII activity (>100%, middle and upper tertile, n=43; p=0.024 by Log Rank test). Adjusting for the material of the implanted stents (nitinol vs. Wallstents), patients with a high HCII activity had a 0.39-fold reduced risk for instent restenosis (95% CI 0.17 to 0.90, p=0.028), additional adjustment for diabetes mellitus, poor run-off, critical limb ischemia and cumulative length of the stented segment did not alter the observed effect. Higher activity of heparin cofactor II may exert a protective effect against instent restenosis also in the femoropopliteal vessel area, confirming a prior observation after coronary stenting.


Thrombosis Research | 1997

EVALUATION OF A NEW SCREENING ASSAY PROC® GLOBAL FOR IDENTIFICATION OF DEFECTS IN THE PROTEIN C/PROTEIN S ANTICOAGULANT PATHWAY

Katharina Ruzicka; Stylianos Kapiotis; Peter Quehenberger; Sylvia Handler; Ingrid Pabinger-Fasching; Christine Mannhalter; Bernd Jilma; Wolfgang Speiser

In the present study a new assay, ProC Global, globally estimating the activity of the main plasma components of anticoagulant protein C/protein S pathway, was evaluated with respect to test characteristics and its sensitivity in the detection of deficiency states of protein C and protein S and of increased aPCR. In the ProC Global assay procedure protein C is activated in patients plasma by an activator reagent (venom from agkistrodon contortrix). The extent of the prolongation of a samples aPTT, caused by the activation of protein C, is taken as a measure for its anticoagulant capacity. Ninety-eight patients with one of the above mentioned defects were investigated. Decreased plasma protein C activity and increased aPCR were detected with a sensitivity of 1.0, while only 11 of 14 patients with decreased levels of free protein S antigen showed abnormal results in the ProC Global assay (sensitivity = 0.79). The test can be used in heparinized samples up to 1.0 anti Xa U/ml heparin (UFH and LMWH). When samples from patients on oral anticoagulant treatment are prediluted with factor V deficient plasma the test is sensitive for increased aPCR.


Critical Care Medicine | 2000

Thrombus formation on the balloon of heparin-bonded pulmonary artery catheters: an ultrastructural scanning electron microscope study.

Roland Hofbauer; Doris Moser; Alan D. Kaye; Christoph Dielacher; Stephan Hornykewycz; Sylvia Handler; Wolfgang Speiser; Stylianos Kapiotis; Michael Frass

Objective: To investigate heparin‐bonded pulmonary artery catheters with respect to thrombus formation and platelet aggregation at the balloon and the shaft using a scanning electron microscope in critically ill patients. Design: Prospective study. Settings: Critical care unit and research laboratories. Patients: Pulmonary artery catheters were inserted in critically ill patients (n = 10). Interventions: Pulmonary artery catheters were removed after 24, 48, 72, or 120 hrs, and the ultrastructure was investigated in specialized research laboratories. Measurements and Main Results: Balloon and shaft were investigated using a scanning electron microscopic technique. Area of thrombus formation was quantified using image analysis. Heparin release of the catheters was measured. The frequency of balloon inflations was investigated in in vitro experiments by inflating catheters different times (0, 10, 20, and 30 times). Twenty‐four hours after catheter insertion, scanning electron microscopic images showed thrombus formation and platelet aggregation at the site of the balloon. Seventy‐two hours after catheter insertion, a thrombus started to detach. The areas of thrombus formation did not differ, but thrombus organization changed dramatically 72 and 120 hrs after catheter insertion. The shaft was colonized by single cells only. Cracks of the balloon could be observed after 72 hrs, whereas no cracks could be found in in vitro controls. In vitro, heparin release of the pulmonary artery catheters decreased significantly after 24 hrs. Conclusions: Scanning electron microscopic images of heparin‐bonded pulmonary artery catheters demonstrate thrombus formation on the balloon 24 hrs after pulmonary artery catheter insertion, increasing dramatically at 72 and 120 hrs. The shaft was colonized by single cells only. The thrombus size is not significantly different during the observation time, but the grade and quality of thrombus formation differ.

Collaboration


Dive into the Sylvia Handler's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Peter Quehenberger

Medical University of Vienna

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Bernd Jilma

Medical University of Vienna

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Christine Mannhalter

Medical University of Vienna

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Michael Frass

Medical University of Vienna

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Erich Minar

Medical University of Vienna

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge