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Biochemistry of thrombin generation
The base of the method for thrombin generation (TG) was made already in 1986. TG in the classical meaning should be understood as the formation of the thrombin curve after addition of a slow reacting thrombin specific substrate. While routine parameters as Quick and aPTT measure only a part of the coagulation cascade (approx. 2% of the formed thrombin), the TG as global parameter includes the total thrombin formation process.
For determination of thrombin generation the coagulation cascade is activated by addition of different concentrations of TF and phospholipids. The resulting thrombin cleaves a fluorogenic or chromogenic substrate and releases a fluorophor or chromophor. The optical signal is continuously plotted. The fluorogenic measurement is not disturbed by the platelets in platelet rich plasma or by the formation of fibrin. When the thrombin concentration is plotted against time it results in a thrombin generation curve that represents different phases of the coagulation reaction. The evaluation parameters lag phase, velocity index, peak height and Area under the Curve (AUC) can be used for assessment.
As critical parameters that influence the assaying and the interpretation of the TG are primarily tissue factor concentrations, origin of the phospholipids, use of platelet rich or platelet poor plasma as well as general lack of standardizing of the evaluation to be mentioned.
The thrombin generation thus includes the total kinetic of the thrombin formation: the initial phase of the thrombin formation, the phases of amplification with positive feedback, the downregulation of the thrombin formation and the inactivation of the formed thrombin.
Clinical or Research use of thrombin generation
- Monitoring of hemophiliacs during Inhibitor-Bypass-Therapy
- Monitoring of anticoagulant therapy
- Risk evaluation by thrombosis recurrence
- Determination of the coagulation activity of Microparticles
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