Until the discovery of factor V, coagulation was regarded as a product of four factors:
calcium (IV) and thrombokinase (III) together acting on
prothrombin (II) to produce
fibrinogen (I); this model had been outlined by
Paul Morawitz in 1905. The suggestion that an additional factor might exist was made by (1905–1990), a
Norwegian physician, during his investigations into the bleeding tendency of a lady called Mary (1914–2002). She had suffered from
nosebleeds and
menorrhagia (excessive menstrual blood loss) for most her life, and was found to have a prolonged
prothrombin time, suggesting either
vitamin K deficiency or
chronic liver disease leading to prothrombin deficiency. However, neither were the case, and Owren demonstrated this by correcting the abnormality with plasma from which prothrombin had been removed. Using Mary's serum as index, he found that the "missing" factor, which he labeled V (I–IV having been used in Morawitz' model), had particular characteristics. Most investigations were performed during the
Second World War, and while Owren published his results in Norway in 1944, he could not publish them internationally until the war was over. They appeared finally in
The Lancet in 1947. The possibility of an extra coagulation factor was initially resisted on methodological grounds by Drs Armand Quick and Walter Seegers, both world authorities in coagulation. Confirmatory studies from other groups led to their final approval several years later. In 1994
factor V Leiden, resistant to inactivation by
protein C, was described; this abnormality is the most common genetic cause for
thrombosis. == Interactions ==