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The Effects of Collagen and Kaolin on the Intrinsic Coagulant Activity of Platelets. EVIDENCE FOR AN ALTERNATIVE PATHWAY IN INTRINSIC COAGULATION NOT REQUIRING FACTOR XII
Author(s) -
Walsh P. N.
Publication year - 1972
Publication title -
british journal of haematology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.907
H-Index - 186
eISSN - 1365-2141
pISSN - 0007-1048
DOI - 10.1111/j.1365-2141.1972.tb05687.x
Subject(s) - coagulation , platelet , chemistry , factor xii , platelet activation , platelet adhesiveness , biophysics , biochemistry , immunology , medicine , platelet aggregation , biology
S ummary Collagen and kaolin have been shown by other workers to initiate intrinsic coagulation by activating factor XII in plasma and to have complex effects on platelets. Because of the presence of collagen at sites of vascular injury there is good reason to believe that collagen has physiological importance in haemostasis. The present experiments were done to determine the effects of collagen and kaolin on platelets and to distinguish the platelet effects from the activity which these surface‐active agents produce in plasma. Using an albumin‐density‐gradient separation (ADGS) method for washing platelets free of loosely adsorbed coagulation factors, it is shown here that collagen can induce a coagulant activity in platelets which initiates intrinsic coagulation. This activity is independent of factor XII, provided factor XI is present. It is postulated that this collagen‐induced coagulant activity of platelets provides an alternative pathway, by‐passing factor‐XII activation, for initiating intrinsic coagulation. The existence of this alternative pathway may provide an explanation for the absence of a haemostatic defect in Hageman trait. The effects of kaolin were similar to those of collagen, but kaolin had greater capacity to activate plasma factor XII and platelet factor 3 and relatively less capacity to activate platelet‐associated factor XI.

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