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[Low sensibility to the action of thrombomodulin in cirrhotic patients. Interest of thrombinography]. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Cirrhosis alters hemostatic balance, reducing both procoagulant and anticoagulant factors, making traditional tests ineffective for assessing thrombotic risk.
  • This study analyzed coagulation in 30 cirrhotic patients using thrombinography, revealing significantly higher thrombin potential ratios compared to healthy controls, indicating a resistance to activated protein C pathways.
  • Findings suggest that rather than being anticoagulated, cirrhotic patients may experience increased hypercoagulability, especially with advanced disease severity, challenging existing beliefs about their coagulation status.*

Article Abstract

Cirrhosis is associated with complex hemostatic modifications. Most coagulation factors, either procoagulants or anticoagulants, are reduced. Conventional coagulation tests (prothrombin time, activated partial thromboplastin time) don't allow to precisely identify the thrombotic risk as they are not sensible to coagulation inhibitors deficiencies. The aim of this study was to evaluate the coagulation in a population of cirrhotic patients using thrombinography. We analyzed the plasma samples from 30 cirrhotic patients (10 Child A, 10 Child B, Child C 10) compared to 10 healthy controls using thrombinography with and without thrombomodulin to sensiblise this test at the activated protein C pathway. The results of endogenous thrombin potential, the main parameter, expressed as a ratio (thrombinography with/without thrombomodulin) were significantly higher in cirrhotic patients (0.69 ± 0.16) than in controls (0.49 ± 0.10) which reflects a low sensibility to the action of thrombomodulin. This resistance increases with the severity of the disease assessed by the Child-Pugh score, demonstrating a potential hypercoagulable state. The results of the thrombinography challenge the dogma that cirrhotic patients are naturally "anticoagulated." These results highlight the potential interest of the thrombinography in the detection and monitoring of hypercoagulability in cirrhotic patient. Increasing hypercoagulability with the severity of the disease seems to be correlated with clinical observations since the occurrence of thrombosis is more common when cirrhosis is at an advanced stage.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1684/abc.2015.1111DOI Listing

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