Coagulation system activity before coronary artery bypass surgery for unstable angina.

2001 
Objective - To measure coagulation activity immediately prior to coronary artery bypass surgery. Previous reports have shown that a hypercoagulable state and reduced fibrinolytic activity increase the risk of postoperative graft failure. Design - Fifty patients with unstable angina and ongoing low-molecular-weight heparin antithrombotic treatment for a median of 4 days and 25 stable patients undergoing elective surgery were included. Results - Antithrombin levels were significantly lower whereas fibrinogen and plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 levels were higher in the unstable patients than in the stable patients. Median preoperative levels of thrombin-antithrombin complex (TAT), prothrombin fragment 1+2 (F 1+2 ), fibrin D-dimers and beta-thromboglobulin did not differ significantly in unstable and stable patients. There were signs of activated coagulation with elevated levels of TAT and F 1+2 before the operation in half of the unstable patients, who had had chest pain at rest within 48 h preceding the ...
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