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Thrombosis Journal 2006
Antithrombin significantly influences platelet adhesion onto immobilized fibrinogen in an in-vitro system simulating low flowAbstract: Platelets in anticoagulated whole blood (29 healthy blood donors) were labelled with fluorescence dye and perfused through a rectangular flow chamber (shear rates of 13 s-1 to 1500 s-1). Platelet adhesion onto fibrinogen-coated slips was assessed using a fluorescence laser-scan microscope and compared to the plasma antithrombin activity. Additionally the effect of supraphysiological AT supplementation on platelets adhesion rate was evaluated.Within a first minute of perfusion, an inverse correlation between platelet adhesion and plasma antithrombin were observed at 13 s-1 and 50 s-1 (r = -0.48 and r = -0.7, p < 0.05, respectively). Significant differences in platelet adhesion related to low (92 ± 3.3%) and high (117 ± 4.1%) antithrombin activity (1786 ± 516 U vs. 823 ± 331 U, p < 0.05) at low flow rate (13 s-1, within first minute) have been found. An in-vitro supplementation of whole blood with antithrombin increased the antithrombin activity up to 280% and platelet adhesion rate reached about 65% related to the adhesion rate in a non-supplemented blood (1.25 ± 0.17 vs. 1.95 ± 0.4 p = 0.008, respectively).It appears that antithrombin in a low flow system suppresses platelet adhesion onto immobilized fibrinogen independently from its antithrombin activity. A supraphysiological substitution of blood with antithrombin significantly reduces platelet adhesion rate. This inhibitory effect might be of clinical relevance.The scope of the problem of arterial and venous thrombosis is staggering since at least 5 million adults in the United States alone suffer from related symptoms. About 50% of the annual non-accidental deaths in the United States are caused by thrombi predominantly composed of platelets in the coronary or cerebral arteries.Antithrombin (AT), in the past also referred as antithrombin III, is a potent inhibitor of the coagulation cascade [1]. Although the name, antithrombin, implies that it works only on thrombin, it actually serves to inhibit virtually all o
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