Abstract

Recombinant tissue-type plasminogen activator (rtPA) is the only globally approved treatment for acute ischaemic stroke. Other potential treatments might be administered with rtPA, making it important to discover whether compounds interfere with rtPA-induced lysis. We evaluated methods for examining the effect of the neuroprotectant NXY-059 on the lytic property of rtPA. Plasma clot formation and lysis in the presence of rtPA and NXY-059 was measured as the change in plasma turbidity. The effect of NXY-059 on rtPA-induced lysis was similarly assessed on preformed clots. Lysis of the thrombus formed in a Chandler loop measured release of fluorescent-tagged fibrinogen that had been incorporated during thrombus formation. Thrombi were exposed to both rtPA and NXY-059 throughout lysis in the presence of 80% autologous plasma and the release of label during lysis was measured. Data interpretation is limited in the clot lysis experiments because either the rtPA was present during clot formation or the drug was added to a clot formed in static conditions. In contrast, thrombi were formed in dynamic flow conditions in the Chandler loop and the time course of lysis in plasma was examined. rtPA increased thrombolysis and the antifibrinolytic trans-4-(aminomethyl) cyclohexane carboxylic acid (AMCA) inhibited lysis. Lysis induced by rtPA was unaltered by NXY-059. The Chandler loop method provides a reliable technique for examining the effect of compounds on rtPA-induced lysis in vitro and demonstrated that NXY-059 does not alter rtPA-induced lysis at clinically relevant concentrations of either drug.

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