Abstract

This study was designed to characterize hemostatic activation (using fibrinopeptide A (FPA), a marker of thrombin activity, and beta-thromboglobulin (BTG), a marker of platelet activation) sequentially in the coronary and peripheral circulation in patients during percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) and several hours after PCI and discontinuation of heparin therapy. Heparin administered during PCI is known to nonuniformly suppress thrombin activity in the coronary. Persistent elevations of FPA in coronary sinus (CS) blood during PCI have been associated with subsequent ischemic events. As a related consideration, rebound thrombin activity has been demonstrated in peripheral blood samples several hours after cessation of heparin therapy in patients with acute coronary syndromes. Accordingly, we hypothesized that increased thrombin activity occurs in the coronary circulation after PCI and is induced by cessation of intravenous heparin to facilitate vascular sheath removal. Such a rebound prothrombotic effect, may contribute to suboptimal outcomes after PCI. In 21 patients undergoing PCI, heparin-bonded catheters were employed to obtain sequential CS and femoral vein (FV) blood samples for measurement in the coronary and peripheral circulation of plasma FPA, a marker of thrombin activity in vivo, and BTG released by platelets during degranulation. Following heparin administration samples were obtained immediately prior to (base) and during (start and end) PCI. Late samples were obtained several hours after PCI (284 +/- 46 min, mean +/- SD) following the cessation of heparin and prior to planned vascular sheath removal. Mean FPA concentration in CS blood was low at baseline (3.82 +/- 2.09 ng/ml) and did not increase during PCI. Mean FPA concentration in CS blood increased significantly several hours after cessation of heparin (3.42 +/- 2.36 vs. 7.82 +/- 9.98, end vs. late, P < 0.001). In contrast, mean FPA concentration in FV blood was highest at baseline following vascular sheath insertion, decreased during PCI (69%, P < 0.05, base vs. end), and trended upward after PCI and cessation of heparin. Mean FPA values were higher at all times in FV compared with CS blood samples and were not concordant after PCI. Elevation of coronary circulation FPA after PCI was maximal in patients with myocardial infarction within 7 days (13.7 +/- 12.4 vs. 5.6 +/- 7.9 ng/ml, P = 0.08), but was not influenced by heparin treatment prior to PCI, a history of unstable angina, or coronary stent placement during PCI (9 of 21 patients). BTG values showed less variation than did FPA values, and cessation of heparin after PCI was not associated with an increase in BTG in CS or FV blood samples. An increase in thrombin activity occurs in the coronary circulation after PCI following discontinuation of heparin. The extent of increased thrombin activity was greatest in patients with recent myocardial infarction and was not exacerbated by coronary stent placement during PCI. This phenomenon may contribute to the important minority of ischemic complications early after PCI.

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