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The Calibrated Automated Thrombogram (CAT): a universal routine test for hyper- and hypocoagulability
Author(s) -
H.C. Hemker,
Peter Giesen,
R. AlDieri,
Véronique Regnault,
E. de Smed,
Rob Wagenvoord,
Thomas Lecompte,
Suzette Beguı́n
Publication year - 2002
Publication title -
pathophysiology of haemostasis and thrombosis
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1424-8840
pISSN - 1424-8832
DOI - 10.1159/000073575
Subject(s) - medicine , library science , test (biology) , subject (documents) , computer science , biology , paleontology
By using a "slow" fluorogenic thrombin substrate and continuous comparison to a simultaneously run calibrator, thrombin generation can be monitored automatically, on line, in clotting PPP or PRP at a throughput of up to 100 samples per hour. The resulting "Thrombogram" in PPP measures hypocoagulability (haemophilias, oral anticoagulants, heparins (-likes), direct inhibitors) and hypercoagulabilities (AT deficiency, prothrombin hyperexpression, prot. C and S deficiency, factor V Leiden, oral contraceptives). In PRP it is diminished in thrombopathies, in von Willebrand disease, by antibodies blocking GPIIb-IIIa or GPIb, or by antiplatelet drugs like aspirin and clopidogrel. Lupus anticoagulant both retards and increases thrombin generation. The thrombogram thus appears to be a broad function test of the haemostatic-thrombotic mechanism of the blood.

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