Abstract

BACKGROUND Reversal of heparin anticoagulation by intravenous protamine sulfate consistently produces acute pulmonary vasoconstriction mediated by the release of thromboxane in the awake lamb. Recently, recombinant platelet factor 4 (rPF4) has been cloned, expressed in Escherichia coli, and infused to reverse heparin anticoagulation in the rat, without producing adverse hemodynamic or pulmonary morphologic effects. The authors sought to learn whether intravenous administration of PF4 is devoid of side effects in the pulmonary circulation of lambs. METHODS The authors evaluated the hemodynamic response and plasma release rates of thromboxane during intravenous challenges with heparin-rPF4 (n = 2), rPF-free carrier (n = 5), rPF4 (n = 5), rPF4 after indomethacin (n = 5), protamine (n = 5) and heparin-protamine (n = 5) in 17 awake, hemodynamically monitored lambs. Each lamb underwent up to three random challenges with a 2-h recovery period between each challenge. RESULTS In two lambs, systemic anticoagulation with heparin followed by reversal of anticoagulation with an intravenous bolus of rPF4 (4 mg/kg) led to acute pulmonary vasoconstriction and hypertension with the release of thromboxane (peak pulmonary artery pressure [Ppa] 40 and 33 mmHg and peak plasma thromboxane B2 50 and 30 ng/ml, respectively). Intravenous administration of rPF4 (1.5 mg/kg) alone increased the Ppa from 17.2 +/- 0.7 mmHg (mean +/- SEM) at baseline to 31.2 +/- 2 mmHg at 1 min (n = 5, P < 0.05). This was associated with an increase of plasma thromboxane B2 from 0.06 +/- 0.02 to 3.96 +/- 1.21 ng/ml. Acute pulmonary vasoconstriction lasted approximately 5 min and was completely prevented by pre-treatment with oral indomethacin (10 mg/kg). Intravenous bolus administration of rPF4 carrier (n = 5) or protamine (2 mg/kg) alone (n = 5) did not induce pulmonary hypertension or the release of thromboxane. In five lambs, intravenous heparin (200 U/kg) followed by protamine (2 mg/kg) consistently produced acute pulmonary vasoconstriction and hypertension. CONCLUSIONS Intravenous injection of human rPF4 into the awake lamb produces acute pulmonary vasoconstriction and hypertension associated with thromboxane release into circulating blood. The effects of rPF4 on the pulmonary vasculature should be evaluated in primates before rPF4 is substituted for protamine in reversing heparin anticoagulation in humans.

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