Are In-Vitro Platelet Function Tests Useful in Predicting Blood Loss Following Open Heart Surgery?

1998 ◽  
Vol 46 (04) ◽  
pp. 228-231 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Wahba ◽  
S. Sander ◽  
D. Birnbaum
Blood ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 106 (11) ◽  
pp. 2172-2172
Author(s):  
Arthur P. Bode ◽  
Christopher S. Crean ◽  
You-Su Sun ◽  
Wiley Nifong ◽  
Jose L. Boyer ◽  
...  

Abstract Open-heart surgery performed with cardiopulmonary extracorporeal bypass (CPB) of anticoagulated blood often is complicated by excessive postoperative hemorrhage due to an acquired platelet function defect and thrombocytopenia inherent to the procedure. One strategy for reducing excessive blood loss is to protect the platelets pharmacologically from activation and damage during the surgical procedure and the CPB, but most inhibitors of platelet activation used in this way would exacerbate bleeding because of the duration of their effect. INS50589 is a competitive and selective P2Y12 receptor antagonist in development by Inspire Pharmaceuticals Inc. Previous studies in normal dogs indicate that 20μM ADP induced ex vivo whole blood platelet aggregation is completely inhibited by the administration of INS50589 and that the effect is quickly reversed upon discontinuation of the administration. This drug is now being tested for efficacy and safety in a canine model of CPB established at East Carolina University. Subjects in the range of 20–30 kg are prepared by sternotomy for extracorporeal recirculation of blood after systemic heparinization. CPB occurs for ninety minutes, followed by weaning from the pump and maintenance for a four hour postoperative period. INS50589 was administered by continuous infusion at a rate of 17 mg/kg/min at initiation of sternotomy and throughout CPB until weaned. Special testing in all subjects includes ex vivo whole blood aggregometry with two doses of ADP, thromboelastography with the TEG® ADP Mapping kit, bleeding times using a 23 gauge puncture of the exposed jugular vein, and measurements of blood loss from the surgical fields. In the placebo treated group, there was a significant loss of platelet response to ADP during CPB that remained in the post-op period at approx 50% of initial values; in contrast, the drug-treated subjects show post-op recovery of ADP response to within 90% of initial values (p<0.01). The vessel bleeding time (VBT) within both groups was greatly prolonged during CPB. Preliminary analysis suggests that in the post-operative period the VBT returned to baseline values after the infusion was discontinued; however, the return was faster in the INS50589-treated animals when compared with the placebo group. The volume of post-operative blood loss was variable but appears to be less in the drug-treatment group versus placebo controls. When adjusted on the basis of red cell mass in the shed blood per body weight the difference was significant (4.78±1.99e10 vs. 10.1±2.91e10 red blood cells/kg), p <0.05. Other preliminary findings in the treatment group included a lesser CPB-related decrease in platelet count, a higher average hematocrit, higher post-op fibrinogen concentration, and a more stable post-op course. These preliminary findings suggest that INS50589 should be effective in protecting platelet function and reducing blood loss in human patients undergoing open-heart surgery.


1995 ◽  
Vol 21 (S 02) ◽  
pp. 91-95 ◽  
Author(s):  
Markus Böck ◽  
Joachim Groh ◽  
Anle Glaser ◽  
Klaus Storck ◽  
Michael Kratzer ◽  
...  

Quality control of platelet concentrates (PC) is an important prerequisite for good transfusion praxis. However, direct measurement of platelet function is complex, since available methods (e.g. aggregometry, serotonin release) are time consuming and require special equipment. Therefore a test system is needed, which is easy to handle, fast, and achieves reliable results. The present paper compares the results of conventional platelet function tests with those of a modified in-vitro bleeding test (IVBT) (Thrombostat 4000) in liquid-stored and cryopreserved PCs. A high correlation between aggregometry, serotonin release, GMP 140 expression upon stimulation, and IVBT was demonstrated. Therefore IVBT seems to be a good alternative to the conventional platelet function tests for quality control of PCs. In addition, a good correlation between the results of IVBT of patients’ blood after PC transfusion and IVBT of patients blood before transfusion supplemented with platelets of the respective PC could be found. Therefore IVBT seems to be able to predict PC transfusion success. However, since these data were obtained in a small sample undergoing bone marrow transplantation, further studies are needed to verify this hypothesis.


1979 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. Stibbie ◽  
P.M. van der Plas ◽  
G.L. Ong ◽  
D.S. de Jong ◽  
E. Krenning-Douma ◽  
...  

In a study concerning open-heart surgery we found that, platelet aggregates present in heparinised human blood disappeared immediately after addition of the gelatin plasma expander haemaccel. A study was therefore initiated of the effect of haemaccei on platelet appregation (Payton apprepometer, 4W RPM as controlled by stroboscope, 37°C, final platelet count 200-300 χ 109/1) and compared with the effect of bovine serum albumin (USA) and platelet poor plasma (PPP). Haemaccel powder was kindly supplied by Rehringwerke and contained 0.98% sodium, 0.015% calcium and no measurable potassium. 0.3 ml human platelet rich plasma (PRP) was nixed with 0.2 ml haemaccel (final concentrations 0-20 mg/ml) in Tyrode’s solution (2 mM Ca++. pH 7,4), Haemaccel inhibited apgrepation in both citrated and heparinised PRP induced by collagen, ADP or adrenalin, both in the presence or absence of indomethacin (90/μM), PPP (0.2 ml) and BSA (in Tyrode’s solution, final concentrations 0-16 mp/ml) were also inhihitinp, hut on a weipht hasis less than haemaccel. Different Ca++ concentrations in the Tyrode’s solution did not alter the inhibition by haemaccel. Final pH in aggregation mixtures varied by less than 0.10 for a given experiment. It is concluded that, under the conditions used, haemaccel and USA inhibit platelet appregation, probably by a non-specific mechanism.


The Lancet ◽  
1963 ◽  
Vol 281 (7292) ◽  
pp. 1190-1191 ◽  
Author(s):  
I.M. Breckenridge ◽  
W.F. Walker

Author(s):  
Diana A. Gorog ◽  
Richard C. Becker

Abstract Studies using whole blood platelet aggregometry as a laboratory research tool, provided important insights into the mechanism and modulators of platelet aggregation. Subsequently, a number of point-of-care (POC) platelet function tests (PFTs) were developed for clinical use, based on the concept that an individual’s thrombotic profile could be assessed in vitro by assessing the response to stimulation of platelet aggregation by specific, usually solo agonists such as adenosine diphosphate (ADP), collagen and thrombin. However, adjusting antiplatelet medication in order to improve the results of such POC PFTs has not translated into a meaningful reduction in cardiovascular events, which may be attributable to important differences between the POC PFT techniques and in vivo conditions, including patient-to-patient variability. Important limitations of most tests include the use of citrate-anticoagulated blood. Citrate directly and irreversibly diminishes platelet function and even after recalcification, it may result in altered platelet aggregation in response to ADP, epinephrine or collagen, and interfere with thrombin generation from activated platelets. Furthermore, most tests do not employ flowing blood and therefore do not assess the effect of high shear forces on platelets that initiate, propagate and stabilize arterial thrombi. Finally, the effect of endogenous thrombolysis, due to fibrinolysis and dislodgement, which ultimately determines the outcome of a thrombotic stimulus, is mostly not assessed. In order to accurately reflect an individual’s predisposition to arterial thrombosis, future tests of thrombotic status which overcome these limitations should be used, to improve cardiovascular risk prediction and to guide pharmacotherapy.


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