Abstract
Although the glass-bead column has been used to measure platelet adhesion, whether platelet interaction with glass beads represents physiologic processes remains unsettled. In an attempt to obtain more physiologic platelet responses, plastic beads coated with type I collagen have been recently developed to replace glass beads. In this study, we analyzed the factors responsible for platelet retention in the collagen-coated–bead column and investigated its possible clinical applications. We pumped citrated whole-blood samples into columns at a fixed speed with an injection pump and calculated platelet-retention rates by measuring platelet counts before and after passage through the columns. The platelet-retention rates, which were highly reproducible with samples from healthy donors, were reduced in a patient with glycoprotein (GP) VI deficiency but not in patients with type III von Willebrand disease. Anti-GPIIb/IIIa antibody and GRGDS peptide markedly inhibited platelet retention, whereas inhibition of the GPIb–von Willebrand factor or GPIa/IIa-collagen interaction had no effect. Data on the effects of various antiplatelet agents (including the antithrombin agent argatroban, prostacyclin, acetylsalicylic acid, and the ADP scavenger creatine phosphate/creatine phosphokinase) support the usefulness of this assay method in clinical application. Our findings suggest that GPVI and GPIIb/IIIa but not the GPIb–von Willebrand factor interaction are mainly involved in platelet retention in this column.
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