Arginine stabilization of blood from myocardial infarction patients treated with reteplase allowed reliable determination of maximal plasmin activities (0.1-0.6 U/mL) at 40 to 60 minutes.
Observational (n=13)
Does arginine stabilization of blood samples allow reliable determination of plasmin and plasminogen activator activities in patients with myocardial infarction receiving fibrinolytic treatment?
Arginine stabilization of blood samples prevents in vitro artefactual changes, allowing reliable measurement of plasmin and plasminogen activator activities during fibrinolytic therapy.
There are no reliable data on plasmin or plasminogen activator (PA) activities in blood of patients receiving fibrinolytic treatment. This is due to continuing in vitro action of PA after blood withdrawal. These artefactual changes of PA or plasmin activities have been prevented by arginine stabilization of blood samples of myocardial infarction patients treated with plasminogen activators. Twelve patients with myocardial infarction were treated with reteplase 2 x 10,000,000 units in bolus application; one patient was treated with 100 mg t-PA in continuous infusion. Blood was immediately stabilized with EDTA and arginine. The plasma was analyzed with newly developed assays for plasmin and PA. Maximal plasmin activities in blood were obtained at 40 to 60 minutes reteplase treatment time (0.1-0.6 U/mL = approximately 0.05-0.3 micromol/L plasmin). The 50% clearance rate for plasmatic Pli was greater than 30 minutes. The plasmatic reteplase concentration peaked at approximately 2,000 U/mL after the first bolus infusion and at approximately 1,500-3,500 U/mL after the second bolus infusion. Reteplase was cleared to 50% within less than 30 minutes, also with great inter-individual variation. Arginine stabilization of blood allows reliable determinations of activities of plasmin and PA in blood of patients under fibrinolytic treatment: substantial plasmin activities occur in patients treated by reteplase. Therapeutic thrombolysis might be improved, imitating the physiologic cellular thrombolysis; i.e., polymorphonuclear phagocytes (PMN) that can be activated by singlet oxygen ((1)O(2)). PMN might be superior to PA in selective lysis of pathologic thrombi.
Stief et al. (Sat,) conducted a observational in Myocardial infarction (n=13). Reteplase was evaluated on Maximal plasmin activities in blood. Arginine stabilization of blood from myocardial infarction patients treated with reteplase allowed reliable determination of maximal plasmin activities (0.1-0.6 U/mL) at 40 to 60 minutes.