Influence of oral contraceptives on coagulation tests in native blood and plasma

1990 
Abstract Routine coagulation laboratory tests, clotting times in native (not anticoagulated) whole blood, platelet-rich and platelet-poor plasma, and recalcification times in citrated whole blood, platelet-rich and platelet-poor plasma were performed in 14 healthy premenopausal women. Blood was taken before and after one or two cycles of low-dose oral contraceptives. After oral contraceptives a reduction in clotting time in native platelet-rich plasma and activated partial thromboplastin time were observed. Recalcification times in whole blood and platelet-rich plasma were shorter than clotting times in their native counterparts. The observed changes are compatible with a procoagulant effect seen soon after the start of oral contraceptive use. The absence of these changes in the recalcification times in citrate systems suggests a masking effect of citrate. The reduction in clotting times in native platelet-rich but not in platelet-poor plasma indicates that the hypercoagulability in oral contraceptives users is mainly related to platelets. (Am J Obstet Gynecol 1990;163:417-20.)
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