AI Article Synopsis

  • Elevated procoagulant activity in trauma patients is linked to tissue factor (TF) on blood cells and microparticles, but the authors hypothesize that factors FXIa and FIXa also contribute to this activity in burn patients.
  • The study involved analyzing plasma samples from 56 burn patients over three weeks, with findings indicating that 19% had active TF, while nearly all samples showed high levels of FXIa and many had FIXa present.
  • This research provides new insights as it reveals that most burn patients exhibit active FXIa and FIXa, with a notable percentage also having active TF, highlighting the variability in concentrations of these proteins across samples.

Article Abstract

Introduction: An elevated procoagulant activity observed in trauma patients is, in part, related to tissue factor (TF) located on blood cells and microparticles. However, analysis of trauma patient plasma indicates that there are other contributor(s) to the procoagulant activity. We hypothesize that factor (F)XIa and FIXa are responsible for an additional procoagulant activity in burn patients.

Methods: Multiple time-point plasma samples from 56 burn patients (total number of samples was 471; up to 20 time-points/patient collected in 3 weeks following admission) were evaluated in a thrombin generation assay using inhibitory antibodies to TF, FIXa and FXIa.

Results: Due to the limited volume of some samples, not all were analyzed for all three proteins. At admission, 10 of 53 patients (19%) had active TF, 53 of 55 (96%) had FXIa and 48 of 55 (87%) had FIXa in their plasma. 34 patients of 56 enrolled (61%) showed TF activity at one or more time-points. All patients had FXIa and 96% had FIXa at one or more time-points. Overall, TF was observed in 99 of 455 samples analyzed (22%), FXIa in 424 of 471 (90%) and FIXa in 244 of 471 (52%). The concentration of TF was relatively low and varied between 0 and 2.1pM, whereas that of FXIa was higher, exceeding 100pM in some samples. The majority of samples with FIXa had it at sub-nanomolar concentrations. No TF, FXIa and FIXa activity was detected in plasma from healthy individuals.

Conclusions: For the first time reported, the majority of plasma samples from burn patients have active FXIa and FIXa, with a significant fraction of them having active TF. The concentration of all three proteins varies in a wide range.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5844776PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.burns.2017.08.003DOI Listing

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