Coagulopathy mediated by hepatoenteric ischemia-reperfusion in rabbits: role of xanthine oxidase.

Transplantation

Department of Anesthesiology, University of Alabama at Birmingham, 619 South 19th Street, Birmingham, AL 35249, USA.

Published: October 2002

Hepatic transplantation may result in coagulopathy caused by the release of mast-cell-derived heparin, and xanthine oxidase (XO) inhibition stabilizes mast cells. Thus, XO inactivation could decrease coagulopathy after hepatoenteric ischemia-reperfusion. Rabbits were fed a standard or XO-inactivating diet before hepatoenteric ischemia for 35 min and before 30 min of reperfusion. Hemostasis was assessed by thrombelastography. Heparin activity was quantified by anti-IIa. XO inactivation resulted in clot formation after reperfusion in all animals, whereas only 37.5% of animals with XO activity clotted (P<0.05). Anti-IIa activity was less in animals at baseline and after reperfusion with XO inactivation (45+/-5 and 65+/-5 mU/mL, respectively) compared to animals with XO activity (51+/-4 and 71+/-5 mU/mL, respectively) (P<0.05). Clot strength, which was mediated by coagulation proteins, was significantly greater at baseline and after reperfusion in animals with XO inactivation. XO inactivation enhances hemostasis by decreasing circulating heparin activity and increasing coagulation protein function before ischemia-reperfusion.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/00007890-200210270-00021DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

hepatoenteric ischemia-reperfusion
8
ischemia-reperfusion rabbits
8
xanthine oxidase
8
coagulopathy mediated
4
mediated hepatoenteric
4
rabbits role
4
role xanthine
4
oxidase hepatic
4
hepatic transplantation
4
transplantation result
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!