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DOWNLOAD PDFVitamin K1, or phylloquinone, is the type of naturally-occurring vitamin K present in green leafy vegetables. It can be found in many vegetables including kale, spinach, collards, broccoli, and swiss chards.
Intestinal microflora is another avenue to satisfy vitamin K requirements, where certain gut bacteria synthesize a form known as vitamin K2. Patients without developed gut flora, such as newborn babies or patients on chronic antibiotics, may display difficulty obtaining adequate stores of functional vitamin K.
Vitamin K epoxide reductase, or VKOR, is the enzyme responsible for reducing vitamin K from its quinone oxidation form to hydroquinone form, which is the active form of vitamin K required as a cofactor to activate clotting factors. During the carboxylation reaction, VKOR lives up to its name by also reducing the vitamin K epoxide that formed.
Vitamin K is an essential cofactor for the carboxylation of glutamate within hepatic cells by providing energy via oxidation, which drives this essential biochemical reaction in the activation of clotting factors.
Through its utility as a cofactor in gamma-carboxylation, vitamin K is required in the activation of clotting factors II, VII, IX, X and protein C and protein S.
Broad spectrum antibiotics deplete normal gut flora, of which several microorganisms play an important role in the synthesis of absorbable vitamin K. Therefore, prolonged antibiotic use can result in vitamin K deficiency, with subsequent clotting deficiencies. Labs will show a normal bleeding time, but increased PT and aPTT.
Newborn infants lack gut flora colonization, and therefore are deficient of vitamin K. This predisposes them to clotting deficiencies and subsequent bleeding problems for the first weeks of life. Lab studies will show increased PT and aPTT levels, with a normal bleeding time. For this reason, all newborns are given an injection of vitamin K.
Warfarin is considered a vitamin K antagonist and depletes the body of clotting factors by preventing vitamin K's normal function as a cofactor in activating these hepatically-synthesized coagulation factors. This is accomplished by competitive inhibition of the essential enzyme VKOR, discussed earlier, that normally reduces vitamin K to its active form. As such, warfarin binds to and precludes VKOR from reducing vitamin K to its active form, which also prevents the vitamin K-dependent activation of clotting factors II, VII, IX and X, as well as the antithrombin factors protein C and protein S. In order to reverse the effects of warfarin, vitamin K can be administered.
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