• J Trauma · Aug 2011

    Poly-N-acetyl glucosamine fibers accelerate hemostasis in patients treated with antiplatelet drugs.

    • Thomas H Fischer, William E Hays, and C Robert Valeri.
    • Francis Owen Blood Research Laboratory, Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina 27516, USA. tfischer@med.inc.edu
    • J Trauma. 2011 Aug 1;71(2 Suppl 1):S176-82.

    BackgroundNanofibers consisting of poly-N-acetyl glucosamine (pGlcNAc), as the functional component of products for surface hemostasis, have been shown to activate platelets and thereby the clotting mechanism. The nanofiber-activated platelets provide a catalytic surface for acceleration of the intrinsic coagulation cascade, thrombin generation, and fibrin polymerization.MethodsThromboelastographic analysis was undertaken to study the role of the pGlcNAc nanofibers in platelet activation and acceleration of fibrin polymerization. Thromboelastographic studies were performed without added activators of coagulation.ResultsThe pGlcNAc nanofibers were found to accelerate fibrin polymerization in whole blood and platelet-rich plasma. Treatment with eptifibatide (an inhibitor of the platelet GPIIbIIIa receptor) and corn trypsin inhibitor inhibited clotting of whole blood and platelet-rich plasma. The inhibition was reversed by treatment with pGlcNAc nanofibers. Inhibition was not observed after treatment with aspirin alone, MRS2359 (platelet ADP receptor inhibitor), or by a combination of aspirin and MRS2359. The pGlcNAc nanofibers accelerate clotting in normal blood treated with aspirin and MRS2359. Clopidogrel (Plavix) and aspirin did not affect the kinetics of pGlcNAc-mediated fibrin polymerization in blood from patients treated with antiplatelet drugs compared with nontreated blood.ConclusionsThese results provide evidence that pGlcNAc nanofibers activate platelets and accelerate the clotting of blood, and on how best to achieve surface hemostasis when patients are coagulopathic because of shock and/or to treatment with antiplatelet drugs.

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