Haematologica Reports 2005; 1(issue 6):
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Introduction
F. Rodeghiero,* P.M. Mannucci°
*Department of Hematology, San Bortolo Hospital, Vicenza, Italy;
°IRCSS Maggiore Hospital and University of Milan, Milan,
Italy
When Eric von Willebrand, almost 80 years ago, first described a
family with a new hemorrhagic disease, he could hardly imagine that
his seminal discover was opening new frontiers of research in a
fascinating area of investigation, still very active and fruitful
at the beginning of the third millennium. Moving from the
recognition, in early ’70, that the intriguing bleeding
disorder called after his name (von Willebrand disease, VWD) is
caused by quantitative or qualitative defects of the plasma protein
von Willebrand factor (VWF), we are now understanding more and more
its molecular structure, functional domains, multimeric assembly
and pleiotropic functions. [>Read full article
in PDF]