American journal of hematology
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Comparative Study
Coagulant proteins and thrombin generation in synovial fluid: a model for extravascular coagulation.
The coagulant content and thrombin generating potential of synovial fluid from patients with osteoarthritis were studied as a model of extravascular coagulation. The concentrations of individual coagulant proteins were partially correlated with their molecular weight. The levels of the very large coagulants factor V, factor VIII and von Willebrand factor antigen (vWF:ag) are less than 1% of the activities found in a normal pooled reference plasma while smaller coagulants including factors IX, XI and prothrombin range between 9 and 30%. ⋯ The addition of specific antibodies to factor VIII or factor V strongly inhibited thrombin production by aPTT. These data confirm a roughly inverse relationship between the concentrations of coagulation proteins and their molecular weight in synovial fluid and indicate that thrombin can be generated in synovial fluid. The inactivation of thrombin in synovial fluid may be more dependent on antithrombin-III than in plasma because of the increased AT-III/alpha-2 macroglobulin ratio seen in synovial fluid.