Prolonged procoagulant activity on overstretch-injured coronary arteries in pigs

2003 
Summary.  This study was designed to assess the time course and nature of the vascular procoagulant response after 1.5-fold balloon overstretch injury of the coronary arteries in pigs. Arteries were excised for chromogenic assay of bound factor (F)Xa and thrombin at 24 h, 3 days, 1 week, or 2 weeks after injury. FXa at the site of injury remained elevated for 1 week (4.9 ± 5.9 µg cm−2, n = 10), compared with non-injured control arteries (0.4 ± 0.2 µg cm−2, n = 18, P = 0.00025), while thrombin was increased only at 24 h. Tissue factor protein was abundant in non-injured coronaries (10 ± 6 ng µg−1 total protein, n = 9) and levels were unchanged by injury (13 ± 11 ng µg−1, n = 6) or 24-h administration of tissue factor pathway inhibitor (16 ± 6 ng µg−1, n = 6). Persistent tissue factor-mediated procoagulant activity may explain the need for prolonged anticoagulation to attenuate neointimal formation after balloon-induced coronary injury.
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