A Method for Extracorporeal Heparin Removal from Blood by Affinity Chromatography
1990; Wiley; Volume: 14; Issue: 6 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1111/j.1525-1594.1990.tb03000.x
ISSN1525-1594
AutoresKenneth C. Hou, Sujata Roy, Richard P. Zaniewski, Edward Shumway,
Tópico(s)Pancreatic function and diabetes
ResumoAbstract: A high level of heparin, infused into blood, often causes severe complications such as hemorrhage, especially when a drug is administered over a long period. The most common way of preventing a patient from bleeding after transfusion is by administering a heparin antagonist such as protamine. The complex molecules formed between heparin and protamine, if left in the bloodstream, may cause hypotension and other side effects. Protamine was immobilized as a bioligand on the affinity matrix formed by grafting an acrylic polymer on cellulose backbone. By flowing blood tangentially along the matrix surface immobilized with protamine, 70–90% heparin reduction was achieved from 1 L of blood containing 10 IU/ml of heparin studied in vitro. The acrylic gel surface avoids lysis of blood, the cellulose support sustains the flow of viscous blood at 50 ml/min, and the tangential flow design permits direct processing of blood without pressure buildup in the system. The example demonstrates the feasibility of applying such a device as a means of immunoadsorptive filter for the selective removal of disease‐causing factors from blood.
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