Publications by authors named "McBane R"

The assumption that fibrin and crosslinked fibrin impart irreversibility to arterial thrombi is explored with procedure developed for measuring changes in platelet function, morphology and fibrinogen metabolism in aging occlusive thrombi, in which the condition of stasis is imposed uniformly. Arterial thrombi containing autologous (111)In labeled platelets were generated in vivo by bilateral mechanical injury of porcine carotid arteries. Vessels containing the platelet-rich thrombi were harvested and incubated intact (37 degrees C) for intervals ranging from 30 min to 12 h.

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Fechtner syndrome is a rare autosomal dominant disorder consisting of macrothrombocytopenia and leukocyte inclusions, associated with Alport's syndrome (hereditary nephropathy, sensorineural hearing loss, and ocular anomalies). We describe a 71-year-old Caucasian male with a history of hearing loss and asymptomatic macrothrombocytopenia incidentally noted in 1985. Several challenges to hemostasis were uneventful, including total hip arthroplasty.

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Arterial thrombophilia independent of vascular pathology has not been previously defined either experimentally or epidemiologically. To address the existence of an individual propensity to arterial thrombosis, we exploited a previously developed procedure entailing traumatic (crush) injury of paired porcine carotid arteries for generating platelet-rich thrombi. Porcine carotid arteries were injured bilaterally by serial hemostat crushes.

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Immunohistochemical analysis of surgically obtained porcine tissue samples reveals ubiquitous staining for prothrombin in organs rich in smooth muscle content and universal staining of smooth muscle in tissue vasculature. The native character of tissue prothrombin is verified first by chromogenic substrate hydrolysis and hirudin inhibition after incubation of tissue extracts with taipan snake venom and phospholipid. Western analysis of tissue extracts confirms the native zymogen molecular weight.

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Reversibility in vivo of acute platelet thrombosis in response to specific anticoagulants is analyzed with thrombi that develop in segments (1 cm) of porcine carotid arteries externally crushed with a hemostat. Most thrombi fill the lumens of the injured segments (ca. 1 cm x 3 mm, 1 x w) within 30 min and comprise masses of platelets interpenetrated with neutrophil-lined seepage channels of blood.

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Endogenously activated protein C is evaluated for antithrombotic activity in porcine carotid arteries subjected to mechanical trauma. Protein C is activated by intravenous administration of guanidinobenzoyl-thrombin, which binds to thrombomodulin and there deacylates to yield thrombin. The bound, transiently active thrombin yields a peak of anticoagulant activity between 5 and 10 min after infusion of the latent thrombin.

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Acute myocardial infarction is initiated by plaque disruption of a fatty plaque with a thin fibrous cap which has been infiltrated by macrophages. The macrophages are attracted and stimulated by oxidized lipids to secrete metalloproteinases which dissolve collagen and arterial wall matrix and to synthesize tissue factor which accumulates in the fatty gruel, and initiates the thrombotic process when exposed to flowing blood after plaque disruption. This initiates thrombin generation which is greatly amplified by the coagulation cascade.

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The unexpected diagnosis of herpetic esophagitis in a patient with nausea led us to review our experience with this disease. Review of our records from 1979 to 1989 produced 23 cases proven by endoscopic culture or microscopic examination (Cowdry-type A inclusions), the largest such series reported to date. Twenty-two of the 23 patients were immunocompromised.

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