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Near-Patient Thrombin Generation in Patients Undergoing Elective Cardiac Surgery
Author(s) -
Martijn Moorlag,
Evelien Schurgers,
Ganeshram Krishnamoorthy,
Anne Bouwhuis,
Theo Lindhout,
Hilde Kelchtermans,
Marcus D. Lancé,
Bas de Laat
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
the journal of applied laboratory medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2576-9456
pISSN - 2475-7241
DOI - 10.1373/jalm.2016.022335
Subject(s) - thrombin generation , medicine , hemostasis , cardiothoracic surgery , cardiac surgery , blood loss , whole blood , cardiology , thrombosis , body mass index , blood volume , anesthesia , surgery , thrombin , urology , platelet
Background Measuring thrombin generation (TG) in plasma increasingly gained attention as a diagnostic tool in the field of thrombosis and hemostasis. To include the contribution of all blood cells, recently, the whole blood TG method was developed. Methods We changed the calculation method of the standard calibrated automated thrombography (CAT) to a method only taking into account the data until the peak of TG, thereby considerably reducing the time from blood draw to result. By redesigning the method, the blood volume per test was reduced to 15 μL. Results For all TG parameters, the interassay variation proved to be below 15%. The interindividual variation of all parameters was comparable to the CAT method. Thirty-three patients undergoing cardiothoracic surgery were included to investigate whether our assay correlates with postoperative blood loss. On dividing patients into severe and mild bleeders, significant differences between both groups were found for the peak endogenous thrombin potential (peakETP) and peak values determined by our near-patient device. Importantly, patients with a peakETP below the median experienced significantly more blood loss compared to those with a peakETP above the median. A similar division based on the peak as well as the body mass index of the patient yielded similar significant differences. A combination of the peakETP, the body mass index, and the lag time even resulted in a better predictor of blood loss compared to each parameter separately. Conclusions Our adapted whole blood TG assay can be used near patients and is indicative for the amount of blood loss post cardiothoracic surgery.

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