| Literature DB >> 25808300 |
Jun Ding1,2, Zengsheng Chen1, Shuqiong Niu1, Jiafeng Zhang1, Nandan K Mondal1, Bartley P Griffith1, Zhongjun J Wu1.
Abstract
Thrombosis and thromboembolism are the life-threatening clinical complications for patients supported or treated with prosthetic cardiovascular devices. The high mechanical shear stress within these devices is believed to be the major contributing factor to cause platelet activation (PA) and function alteration, leading to thrombotic events. There have been limited quantitative data on how the high mechanical shear stress causes platelet activation. In this study, shear-induced PA in the ranges of well-defined shear stress and exposure time relevant to cardiovascular devices was quantitatively characterized for human blood using two novel flow-through Couette-type blood shearing devices. Four markers of platelet activation-surface P-selectin (CD62p), platelet-derived microparticles (PMPs), platelet-monocyte aggregation (PMA), and soluble P-selectin-were measured by flow cytometry and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), respectively. The results indicated that PA induced by high shear stresses with short exposure time could be reliably detected with surface P-selectin, and, to a lesser extent, PMPs rather than soluble P-selectin. It was also verified that PMA can be a highly sensitive indirect marker of platelet activation. The quantitative relationship between percentage of activated platelets indicated by surface P-selectin expression and shear stress/exposure time follows well the power law functional form. The coefficients of the power law models of PA based on surface P-selectin expression were derived.Entities:
Keywords: Blood-shearing device; Exposure time; Power law model; Shear stress; Shear-induced platelet activation
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25808300 DOI: 10.1111/aor.12438
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Artif Organs ISSN: 0160-564X Impact factor: 3.094