| Literature DB >> 31677034 |
Reza Nedaeinia1, Habibollah Faraji2,3, Shaghayegh Haghjooye Javanmard4, Gordon A Ferns5, Majid Ghayour-Mobarhan6, Mohammad Goli7, Baratali Mashkani8, Mozhdeh Nedaeinia9, Mohammad Hossein Hayavi Haghighi10, Maryam Ranjbar11,12.
Abstract
Vascular occlusion is one of the major causes of mortality and morbidity. Blood vessel blockage can lead to thrombotic complications such as myocardial infarction, stroke, deep venous thrombosis, peripheral occlusive disease, and pulmonary embolism. Thrombolytic therapy currently aims to rectify this through the administration of recombinant tissue plasminogen activator. Research is underway to design an ideal thrombolytic drug with the lowest risk. Despite the potent clot lysis achievable using approved thrombolytic drugs such as alteplase, reteplase, streptokinase, tenecteplase, and some other fibrinolytic agents, there are some drawbacks, such as high production cost, systemic bleeding, intracranial hemorrhage, vessel re-occlusion by platelet-rich and retracted secondary clots, and non-fibrin specificity. In comparison, bacterial staphylokinase, is a new, small-size plasminogen activator, unlike bacterial streptokinase, it hinders the systemic degradation of fibrinogen and reduces the risk of severe hemorrhage. A fibrin-bound plasmin-staphylokinase complex shows high resistance to a2-antiplasmin-related inhibition. Staphylokinase has the potential to be considered as a promising thrombolytic agent with properties of cost-effective production and the least side effects.Entities:
Keywords: Clot; Myocardial infarction; Plasminogen activator; Staphylokinase; Thrombolytic therapy
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31677034 DOI: 10.1007/s11033-019-05167-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Biol Rep ISSN: 0301-4851 Impact factor: 2.316