Evaluation of thrombin in urine as a real-time indicator of clotting activation in glomerulonephritis

2004 
: When tissues are injured and bleeding occurs, blood clotting is immediately activated and fibrin clots are formed by thrombin. Afterwards, antithrombin III promptly inactivates thrombin, which restricts the clotting to the bleeding site. In inflamed sites, tissue factor is expressed on cells in the lesion by stimulation from cytokines, and produces thrombin. In this case, thrombin may survive longer because of inefficient inactivation by antithrombin III due to dilution and less perturbation in the interstitial fluid, and therefore, has a greater chance to activate thrombin receptors (protease-activated receptors: PARs) on the cells, which induces various cellular events including proliferation, migration, and shape change. Recent studies have suggested a pathophysiological association of the PAR pathway with crescentic glomerulonephritis. However, the role of thrombin in human diseases has not been fully studied, probably because of a lack of simple and reliable methods for measuring thrombin in clinical samples. To solve this problem, we developed an ELISA system for human alpha-thrombin and applied it to the measurement of thrombin in the urine of patients with glomerulonephritis. Thrombin in urine was detected in glomerulonephritic patients but not in healthy volunteers or disseminated intravascular coagulation patients, which suggests that thrombin in urine may reflect thrombin generation by clotting activation in the glomerular lesion.
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