Abstract

To determine a possible phase of hypercoagulability after the use of high-dose aprotinin, a prospective randomized double-blind study was performed. Twenty patients undergoing aortocoronary bypass surgery were investigated, a placebo group P (n = 10) was compared to an aprotinin group A (n = 10). Examining parameters of thrombin activation and fibrinolysis, we found during extracorporeal circulation--under continuous aprotinin infusion--a significant inhibition of thrombin activation and fibrinolysis in the aprotinin group (thrombin-antithrombin-III-complexes: 95 +/- 23 micrograms/l, d-dimers: 448 +/- 60 ng/ml, plasminogen activity: 33 +/- 3%, plasminogen activator inhibitor: 98 +/- 14 U/ml) compared to the placebo group (thrombin-antithrombin-III-complexes: 143 +/- 13 micrograms/l, d-dimers: 2755 +/- 430 ng/ml, plasminogen activity: 125 +/- 15%, plasminogen activator inhibitor: 10 +/- 4 U/ml). In contrast, after stopping the aprotinin infusion--from the end of extracorporeal circulation until the morning of the first postoperative day--strong thrombin activation took place in the aprotinin group (d-dimers increased from 472 +/- 90 to 1607 +/- 140 ng/ml), while in the placebo group a decrease could be registered. At this time, the fibrinolysis was still reduced in the aprotinin group (plasminogen activity: 48 +/- 6% vs 85 +/- 16% in the placebo group). In conclusion, interference with the thrombohemorrhagic balance induces hypercoagulability after the use of high-dose aprotinin, with elevated levels of thrombin-antithrombin-III-complexes, d-dimers, and plasminogen and a decreased level of plasminogen activator inhibitor. In our opinion, it is necessary to prevent this counter-regulation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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