Abstract

Hemostasis was assessed in 115 steady-state heart transplant recipients (HTRs) and compared with that of 23 age-matched healthy controls and 21 age-matched patients with ischemic heart disease (IHD). Compared with the controls, the HTRs had increased levels of fibrinogen (mean and 95% confidence limits of 4.50 [4.32-4.68] g/L versus 3.47 [3.07-3.87] g/L, P < 0.001), factor VIIC (1.16 [0.98-1.21] IU/ml versus 0.99 [0.89-1.10] IU/ml, P < 0.001), and von Willebrand factor antigen (1.72 [1.58-1.88] IU/ml versus 1.00 [0.80-1.26] IU/ml, P < 0.001). HTRs had increased antithrombin III activity (P = 0.002) and protein C activity (P = 0.002), with a decrease in total protein S levels (P < 0.001) but no change in free protein S levels. Stepwise discriminant analysis of hemostatic variables showed that fibrinogen was the best discriminator of the three groups, classifying 55.6% of HTR, 40% of IHD, and 66.7% of the controls. More marked prothrombotic changes were found in HTRs transplanted for IHD than for other causes; this reached significance for prothrombin (P = 0.048), factor IX (P = 0.003), and poor fibrinolytic activity as measured by euglobulin clot lysis time (P = 0.008). The HTRs with accelerated coronary sclerosis (ACS) tended to have the most prothrombotic changes; this reached significance with factor IX (P = 0.03). In conclusion, HTRs have perturbed hemostasis; the net effects of these changes are prothrombotic. The relationship between prothrombotic changes and ACS merits further studies.

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