| Literature DB >> 29564685 |
S He1, M Blombäck2,3, F Boström4, H Wallen2, J Svensson2, A Östlund5,6.
Abstract
Acute traumatic coagulopathy (ATC) diagnosed by prolongation of APTT and/or PT/INR involves alterations in platelet activity, coagulation and fibrinolysis. However, data showing the haemostatic situation in injured patients without ATC are scarce. To assess whether haemostatic impairment is also present in injured patients without ATC, ten injured patients without ATC and ten normal individuals were examined. The patients were sampled on arrival at the emergency department 0, 2, 12 h after surgical or other intervention. Thrombin generation, fibrin formation and fibrin proteolysis were determined via several laboratory methods, using tissue factor as the coagulation trigger. Thrombograms demonstrated that trauma accelerated both thrombin generation and decay. In the presence of unaffected peak thrombin levels, these two contradictory effects cancelled each other out, leading to the global endogenous thrombin potential (ETP) remaining normal. Under the mediation of normal ETP, fibrin network permeability (Ks) kept the reference levels in the two groups of subjects. Fibrinogen (FBG) activity (Clauss) rose with time from 0 to 2 h and 12 h, which significantly slowed down Clot Lysis Potential as determined by an in vitro method with exogenous t-PA.Entities:
Keywords: Acute traumatic coagulopathy; Clot proteolysis; Coagulation; Fibrinogen; Thrombin generation
Mesh:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29564685 PMCID: PMC5889778 DOI: 10.1007/s11239-018-1642-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Thromb Thrombolysis ISSN: 0929-5305 Impact factor: 2.300
Characteristics of the injured patients without acute traumatic coagulopathy
| Patient no. | Age | Trauma | Injuries | Acute intervention/surgery | Transfusion | Synthetic colloids |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 27 | Motor bike acc. | Rib fracture, lung and liver contusion | No acute intervention | N | N |
| 2 | 31 | Motor bike acc. | Open arm fracture | Ext. fixation of fracture | N | N |
| 3 | 56 | Motor bike acc. | Rib and scapular fractures, liver contusion | Thoracic drain | N | N |
| 4 | 25 | Crush injury | Shoulder injury | Reposition | N | N |
| 5 | 55 | Car acc. | Facial and fibula fracture | No acute intervention | N | N |
| 6 | 35 | Crush injury | Pelvic fracture, liver contusion, aortic dissect | Stenting aorta + laparotomy | 4 U RBC + 1 U plasma | Y |
| 7 | 45 | Crush injury | Sternal fracture, liver laceration | Laparotomy | N | Y |
| 8 | 34 | Car acc. | Femur facture | Traction femur | N | N |
| 9 | 31 | Crush injury | Open tibial facture, crush injury leg | Ext. fix. femur revision | 4 U RBC | Y |
| 10 | 42 | Crush injury | Pelvic, rib and femur fracture, lung contusion | Bilat. ext. fixation of femur | 4 U RBC + 4 U plasma | Y |
Acc. accident, U unit, RBC red blood cell, N no, Y yes
Fig. 1Variables of CAT measurement in the trauma patients and the normal individuals (reference group). Normal: normal individuals (n = 10). Patients: trauma patients (n = 10) sampled at time point 0 (arrival at the emergency department), and time points 2 and 12 h (2 and 12 h after termination of surgery or other forms of intervention). CAT variables: A lag phase = time-to-start of detectable thrombin generated, B peak thrombin = maximum concentration of thrombin generated, C peak thrombin time = time taken to reach “peak thrombin”, D tail-start time = time taken to observe the full deterioration of generated thrombin, and E ETP endogenous thrombin potential, calculated as the area under the curve during the whole registration time. Dotted line with an arrow = Variables from the normal individual group compared with those from the patients at 0, 2 or 12 h were analysed by using Mann Whitney test. # and dotted line with two bars = Variables from the same patients between different time points (0, 2, and 12 h) were compared by using Repeated measures ANOVA test. ns = p > 0.05, *p < 0.05, **p < 0.01 and ***p < 0.0001. In CAT assays, plasma was clotted by adding a coagulation trigger solution including recombinant tissue factor (rTF, 5 pM), purified phospholipids (PPLs, 4 µM) and fluorogenic substrate together with CaCl2, i.e., FluCa (20 mM); plasma volume versus volume of reagent solution was 80 versus 40 µL (2:1). See “Materials and methods” for more information
Fig. 2Fibrinogen (FBG) activity in the trauma patients and the normal individuals (reference group). FBG activity was determined by using the Clauss method. See Fig. 1 or “Materials and methods” for more information
Fig. 3Fibrin network permeability (Ks) and its correlation to values of ETP and FBG activity. In the Ks assays, clots were prepared by mixing plasma with the coagulation trigger solution at concentrations and plasma dilution degree identical to those in the CAT assay (though CaCl2 was used instead of FluCa). rs = Spearman’s correlation coefficient. See Figs. 1 and 2 or “Materials and methods” for more information
Fig. 4Clot Lysis property and its correlation to FBG activity or to fibrin network permeability. The laboratory and statistical methods are described above (Figs. 1, 2, 3); for more information, see “Materials and methods”