Studies on the functionality of fibrinogen during rt-PA therapy: results of three different methods of fibrinogen determination
article
The conversion of soluble fibrinogen to insoluble fibrin is a crucial event in the process of haemostasis. In the present study three different methods were used for the determination of plasma fibrinogen levels in 12 patients with acute myocardial infarction during rt-PA therapy. Two methods were based on fibrin formation and thus measured 'functional' fibrinogen: a clotting rate assay according to the Clauss method and a photometric polymerization rate assay. Thirdly, fibrinogen antigen was measured with a new enzyme immunoassay (EIA) for immunologically intact fibrinogen. The levels of functional and intact fibrinogen were strikingly different: 4.1 g/l (Clauss) and 3.6 g/l (photometric) vs 2.6 g/l (EIA) at baseline, 2.2 g/l (54% of preinfusion value) and 2.1 g/l (59%) vs 2.1 g/l (81%) at 90 min, 5.7 g/l (146%) and 4.5 g/l (130%) vs 2.7 g/l (106%) at 72 h. The rebound phenomenon exhibited by functional fibrinogen (130-150%) was not observed for levels of intact fibrinogen. A ratio was calculated of functional (Clauss method) to intact fibrinogen (EIA) for each individual patient and each time point. The mean ratio (n = 12 patients) was 1.6 at baseline, 1.0 at 90 min, and increased markedly between 8 and 24 h to a maximum of 2.1 (P less than 0.01). Our data indicate that the 'functionality', i.e. the clotting rate per unit concentration of circulating fibrinogen, changed during acute myocardial infarction and subsequent thrombolytic therapy. This is in keeping with data from literature that the relative amount of fast clotting high molecular weight (HMW) fibrinogen of total fibrinogen was increased in the initial phase of acute myocardial infarction
TNO Identifier
268302
Source
Blood coagulation and fibrinolysis, 3, pp. 81-87.
Pages
81-87
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