Hemophilia B (PTC deficiency, or Christmas disease).

In 1947, it was shown by means of a new procedure, the prothrombin consumption test, that blood did not contain thromboplastin either free or in a precursor state but that it was formed as the result of an interaction between a platelet factor and what was assumed to be at that time a single plasma constituent which was lacking in hemophilia.1Five years later Schulman and Smith2reported a patient whose clinical condition was indistinguishable from hemophilia but whose defective prothrombin-consumption time was corrected by plasma from a known hemophiliac. They concluded that their patient lacked a plasma factor different from thromboplastinogen, the agent deficient in hemophilia, but which was equally as essential for the formation of plasma thromboplastin. No specific name other than X was given to this new factor. Interestingly, a week after Schulman and Smith sent their manuscript for publication, Aggeler and his associates3

[1]  A. Quick,et al.  Action of erythrocyte extract on the prothrombin consumption test. , 1958, The American journal of physiology.

[2]  C. Hussey,et al.  HÆMOPHILIA-LIKE STATES IN GIRLS , 1958 .

[3]  J. Lewis,et al.  Hemostatic data in relatives of hemophiliacs A and B; evidence for modifying the classical sex-linked recessive hypothesis. , 1958, A.M.A. archives of internal medicine.

[4]  R. G. Macfarlane,et al.  Haemophilia and Related Conditions: A Survey of 187 Cases , 1958, British journal of haematology.

[5]  A. Quick The thromboplastinogen activity time (TAT) test. , 1958, Thrombosis et diathesis haemorrhagica.

[6]  J. Wilkinson,et al.  Changes in the blood-clotting defect in Christmas disease after plasma and serum transfusions. , 1958, Clinical science.

[7]  R. Hardisty Christmas Disease in a Woman , 1957, British medical journal.

[8]  O. Ratnoff,et al.  On the epidemiology of hemophilia and Christmas disease. , 1957, The New England journal of medicine.

[9]  C. Hougie,et al.  Stuart clotting defect. I. Segregation of an hereditary hemorrhagic state from the heterogeneous group heretofore called stable factor (SPCA, proconvertin, factor VII) deficiency. , 1957, The Journal of clinical investigation.

[10]  A. Quick ‘Erythrocytin’ and ‘Erythrochelatin’ , 1957, Nature.

[11]  E. Page,et al.  Plasma Throinboplastin Component (PTC) Deficiency , 1952, Journal of the American Medical Women's Association.

[12]  J. Soulier,et al.  Déficit en facteur antihémophilique B avec allongement du temps de saignement. , 1957 .

[13]  J. Case,et al.  The stability of Christmas factor; a guide to the management of Christmas disease. , 1956, Lancet.

[14]  I. Krauß,et al.  Die Hämophilie B und ihre Behandlung , 1956 .

[15]  K. Denson,et al.  A ‘New’ Coagulation Defect , 1956, British journal of haematology.

[16]  A. Videbaek,et al.  Christmas factor deficiency and decreased capillary resistance in a female with haemorrhagic diathesis. , 1956, Danish medical bulletin.

[17]  M. Verstraete,et al.  Combined Antihaemophilic Globulin and Christmas Factor Deficiency in Haemophilia , 1955, British medical journal.

[18]  A J QUICK,et al.  Hemophilia and hemophiliacs. , 1955, Bulletin of the Medical Library Association.

[19]  R. J. Speer,et al.  Combined hemophilia and PTC deficiency. , 1955, Blood.

[20]  D. Bergsagel The Role of Calcium in the Activation of the Christmas Factor , 1955, British journal of haematology.

[21]  W. N. Bell,et al.  A Brain Extract as a Substitute for Platelet Suspensions in the Thromboplastin Generation Test , 1954, Nature.

[22]  P. Fantl,et al.  Haemophilia: a syndrome under review; investigations of alpha and beta prothromboplastin deficiencies. , 1954, Australasian annals of medicine.

[23]  C. Hussey,et al.  THE CLOTTING ACTIVITY OF HUMAN ERYTHROCYTES: THEORETICAL AND CLINICAL IMPLICATIONS* , 1954, The American journal of the medical sciences.

[24]  M. C. Rosenthal Deficiency in plasma thromboplastin component. II. Its incidence in a hemophilic population; critique of methods for identification. , 1954, American journal of clinical pathology.

[25]  Frick Pg The relative incidence of anti-hemophilic globulin (AHG), plasma thromboplastin component (PTC), and plasma thromboplastin antecedent (PTA) deficiency; a study of fifty-five cases. , 1954 .

[26]  P. Fantl,et al.  BETA–PROTHROMBOPLASTIN DEFICIENCY CAUSING A HÆMORRHAGIC TENDENCY RESEMBLING HÆMOPHILIA , 1954, The Medical journal of Australia.

[27]  F. Koller Symposium: What Is Hemophilia?: Is Hemophilia a Nosologic Entity? , 1954 .

[28]  A. S. Douglas,et al.  The initial stages of blood coagulation , 1953, The Journal of physiology.

[29]  K. Brown,et al.  Christmas disease; a variant of haemophilia. , 1953, Canadian Medical Association journal.

[30]  A. Loeliger,et al.  [Hemophilia B; two cases of hereditary hemophilia due to a deficiency of a new clotting factor (Christmas factor)]. , 1953, Acta haematologica.

[31]  A. S. Douglas,et al.  The Thromboplastin Generation Test , 1953, Journal of clinical pathology.

[32]  A. S. Douglas,et al.  Christmas Disease , 1952 .

[33]  C. Smith,et al.  Hemorrhagic disease in an infant due to deficiency of a previously undescribed clotting factor. , 1952, Blood.

[34]  A. Quick STUDIES ON THE ENIGMA OF THE HEMOSTATIC DYSFUNCTION OF HEMOPHILIA , 1947, The American journal of the medical sciences.

[35]  A. Quick HEMORRHAGIC DISEASES. , 1958, California and western medicine.