Abstract
It remains unclear whether atrial fibrillation (AF) alone determines systemic changes in hemocoagulation. Our aim was to examine the prothrombin fragment F1+2 and fibrinopeptide A (FPA) as early markers of coagulation activity still in the first twenty-four hours of paroxysmal AF (PAF) and to correlate them with the arrhythmia onset. 51 non-anticoagulated patients (26 men, 25 women, aged 59.84±1.6 years) and 52 controls (26 men, 26 women, aged 59.50±1.46 years) were sequentially selected. F1+2 and FPA plasma levels were measured by enzyme-linked immunoassays. F1+2 was significantly higher in patients (292.61pmol/L±14.03pmol/L vs 183.40pmol/L±8.38pmol/L; p<0.001). FPA was also substantially higher (4.47ng/mL±0.25 ng/mL vs 3.09ng/mL±0.15ng/mL, p<0.001). Among the potential predictors for these deviations: age, gender, BMI, PAF duration and CHA2DS2-VASc score, it was established that higher F1+2 and FPA plasma levels were independently associated only with PAF duration (p<0.05). Moreover, longer episodes were associated with higher values of F1+2 (Adjusted R2 = 0.68) and FPA (Adjusted R2 = 0.70). Increased coagulation activity was present still in the first twenty-four hours of PAF clinical presentation. The disease itself was associated with increasing hypercoagulability over time, suggesting its importance as an independent risk factor for thromboembolic events.
Published Version
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