Thromb Haemostasis
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Tranexamic acid (AMCA) is an inhibitor of fibrinolysis used to treat fibrinolytic bleeding (e.g., menorrhagia and gastro-intestinal haemorrhage), and to prevent bleeding at surgery, in cases of abruptio placentae and general haemorrhage. As AMCA stabilises preformed clots and prolongs their dissolution, it has been debated whether treatment with AMCA might predispose to thrombosis by depressing the fibrinolytic system. Pregnant women constitute a group with low fibrinolytic capacity and an increased frequency of thrombosis further increased after Caesarean section, and are thus more likely to be susceptible to antifibrinolytic therapy. ⋯ Of the AMCA treated group (n = 256), two patients--one of whom belonged to the Caesarean section subgroup (n = 168)--had pulmonary embolism. Of the controls (n = 1,846), three patients had deep vein thrombosis and one had pulmonary embolism, all four cases belonging to the Caesarean section subgroup (n = 443). Thus, the findings in this high risk group of women with complicated pregnancies, frequently entailing delivery by Caesarean section, provided no evidence of any thrombogenic effect of AMCA.
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Blood samples were collected from 43 patients undergoing elective cardiac surgery to determine the extent of thrombin generation and inhibition in patients when receiving heparin while undergoing cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB). Plasma prothrombin fragment F1 + 2 and thrombin-antithrombin III (TAT) levels were measured as markers of thrombin generation and inhibition, respectively. Both F1 + 2 and TAT levels increased significantly during the course of CPB despite the heparin causing significant systemic anticoagulation, i.e. the activated coagulation time (ACT) was prolonged to greater than 400 s throughout the entire surgical procedure. ⋯ The observation that high dose heparin did not prevent thrombin generation during CPB, is consistent with previous experimental studies demonstrating that thrombin bound to fibrin or other surfaces (e.g. the CPB conduit) is resistant to antithrombin III/heparin inhibition, and thus able to facilitate further thrombin generation. The observation that thrombin generation continued to be elevated post surgery i.e. 24 h after neutralizing the heparin with protamine sulphate, suggests that the high dose heparin did not inhibit effectively all of the thrombin that had been generated. Thus, CPB patients may be at risk not only of bleeding and other side-effects associated with the acute use of high dose heparin, but may also be at risk of further thrombosis-related events either acutely or chronically.