Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Thrombin generation, a function test of the haemostaticthrombotic system

2006; Thieme Medical Publishers (Germany); Volume: 96; Issue: 11 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1160/th06-07-0408

ISSN

2567-689X

Autores

Raed Al Dieri, Erik De Smedt, Suzette Beguı́n, H.C. Hemker,

Tópico(s)

Venous Thromboembolism Diagnosis and Management

Resumo

Summary By the use of a fluorogenic thrombin substrate and continuous calibration of each individual sample, it is now possible to obtain a thrombin generation (TG) curve (or thrombogram) in plasma, with or without platelets, in an easy routine procedure at high throughput and with an acceptable experimental error (< 5%). Evidence is growing that the parameters of the thrombogram, and notably the area under the curve (endogenous thrombin potential, ETP), are useful in assessing bleeding-or thrombotic risk and its modification by antithrombotic-or haemostatic treatment. Available data strongly suggest that conditions (congenital, acquired, drug-induced) that increase TG all cause a thrombotic tendency and that conditions that decrease TG prevent thrombosis but, beyond a limit, cause bleeding. Diminution of TG is a common denominator of all antithrombotic treatment, including anti-platelet drugs. The thrombogram can also be used as a tool in the search for new antithrombotics and reflects the haemorrhagic or thrombotic side effects of other drugs (e.g. oral contraceptives).The thrombogram thus is a promising new approach to clinical management of bleeding and thrombotic disease as well as a tool in drug research and epidemiology. Our experience at this moment is insufficient, however, to already clearly define its limits.

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