Publication Details

AFRICAN RESEARCH NEXUS

SHINING A SPOTLIGHT ON AFRICAN RESEARCH

medicine

Blood platelets in cardiopulmonary bypass operations. Recovery occurs after initial stimulation, rather than continual activation

Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, Volume 97, No. 3, Year 1989

The ultrastructure of blood platelets was related to platelet function and secretion products before, during, and after cardiopulmonary bypass. Circulating platelets from 15 patients undergoing aorta-coronary bypass operations were investigated at ten predetermined points of time by scanning and transmission electron microscopy. Simultaneously, platelet adenosine triphosphate, diphosphate, and serotonin, as well as plasma levels of platelet factor 4, β-thromboglobulin, serotonin, thromboxane B2, lactic dehydrogenase, and free hemoglobin were measured. Moreover, platelet responsiveness toward adenosine diphosphate and collagen was determined by optical aggregometry. By scanning electron microscopy, the number of unactivated platelets dropped from 96% ± 4% to 54% ± 19% (p < 0.05) 8 minutes after the onset of bypass. Simultaneously, the percentage of 'shape changed' platelets significantly increased. No major release reaction was detected at this time. After the initial activation, platelet morphology began to recover although the bypass continued. During the late period of bypass, a highly significant correlation between increasing plasma levels of α-granule compounds (platelet factor 4 and β-thromboglobulin) and lysis parameters (lactic dehydrogenase and free hemoglobin) was found. However, transmission electron microscopic analysis of the arterial filter and scanning electron microscopic findings of circulating platelets indicated that the release products in plasma were due not only to plateltet lysis but also to a limited extent to secondary aggregation. In an inverse and probably causative manner, platelet morphology recovered, whereas the sensitivity of platelets to adenosine diphosphate and collagen decreased toward the end of bypass.
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