POSTOPERATIVE HEMOSTASIS AND FIBRINOLYSIS IN PATIENTS UNDERGOING CARDIOPULMONARY BYPASS WITH OR WITHOUT APROTININ THERAPY

1994 
: Intra- and postoperative blood loss during open heart surgery is reduced by approximately 50% when aprotinin, a potent inhibitor for plasmin and kallikrein, is administered during surgery. But whether aprotinin increases the risk of thrombotic complications remains controversial. The aim of this study was to evaluate the effects of aprotinin administration on coagulation and fibrinolysis during and after cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB). Thirty patients undergoing CPB were randomly assigned to two comparable groups for a double-blind study (16 patients receiving high-dose aprotinin, 14 patients receiving placebo). Patients' plasma levels of ATM (thrombin-induced modified antithrombin III), FbDP (fibrin degradation products, D-Dimers), t-PA (tissue-type plasminogen activator) and PAI-1 (plasminogen activator inhibitor type 1) were measured at regular intervals. In both groups, ATM level increased during surgery (from less than 30 to 90-110 ng/ml) and returned to normal 24 h after surgery and remained unchanged thereafter. Aprotinin reduced this increase in ATM levels (p = 0.02 at 30 min after the start of CPB). The FbDP generated during surgery was greatly reduced in the aprotinin group (945 ng/ml) in comparison with the placebo group (1889 ng/ml, p = 0.004). After surgery, FbDP levels decreased in both groups with nadirs at 2nd day (placebo group: 940 ng/ml and aprotinin group: 865 ng/ml) indicating a hypofibrinolytic period. Then, the FbDP level in both groups started to increase up to the 9th day, in an identical manner.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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