AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examines the characteristics and formation of coronary artery thrombi in patients with ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction, revealing differences based on the time of ischemia after the event.
  • Thrombi formed within 2 hours are mainly made up of platelets, whereas those formed after 12 hours show a different structure, with a significant increase in red blood cells and a distinctive pattern of compression.
  • These findings indicate that older thrombi are less responsive to treatments due to their dense composition, highlighting the need for tailored therapeutic approaches depending on the thrombus age.

Article Abstract

We describe the internal structure, spatial organization and dynamic formation of coronary artery thrombi from ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction patients. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) revealed significant differences among four groups of patients (<2 hours; 2-6 hours; 6-12 hours, and >12 hours) related to the time of ischemia. Coronary artery thrombi from patients presenting less than 2 hours after the infarction were almost entirely composed of platelets, with small amounts of fibrin and red blood cells. In contrast, thrombi from late presenters (>12 hours) consisted of mainly platelets at the distal end, where clotting was initiated, with almost no platelets at the proximal end, while the red blood cell content went from low at the initiating end to more than 90% at the proximal end. Furthermore, fibrin was present mainly on the outside of the thrombi and older thrombi contained thicker fibers. The red blood cells in late thrombi were compressed to a close-packed, tessellated array of polyhedral structures, called polyhedrocytes. Moreover, there was redistribution from the originally homogeneous composition to fibrin and platelets to the outside, with polyhedrocytes on the interior. The presence of polyhedrocytes and the redistribution of components are signs of in vivo clot contraction (or retraction). These results suggest why later thrombi are resistant to fibrinolytic agents and other treatment modalities, since the close-packed polyhedrocytes form a nearly impermeable seal. Furthermore, it is of particular clinical significance that these findings suggest specific disparate therapies that will be most effective at different stages of thrombus development.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1055/s-0041-1739193DOI Listing

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