Intravascular coagulation in acute liver failure in rats and its treatment with antithrombin III

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Abstract

Liver damage was induced in rats by injection of dimethylnitrosamine (DMN) or carbon tetrachloride (CC4). Fibrin clots were observed in the hepatic sinusoids at 12 hours and soluble fibrin monomer complexes were markedly detected at 24 hours only in the rats given DMN. When antithrombin III concentrate was infused at 12 hours there was a dose dependent improvement of the values of serum total bilirubin, SGPT, prothrombin time, peripheral platelet count, and plasma fibrinogen and coagulation factor VIIIC and of the histological degree of liver injury at 24 hours in the DMN group. The CCl 4-group showed no such improvement. Intravascular coagulation may complicate the course of certain types of acute liver injury and contribute to its aggravation in rats. Under such circumstances, treatment with antithrombin III concentrate would be beneficial.

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Fujiwara, K., Ogata, I., Ohta, Y., Hirata, K., Oka, Y., Yamada, S., … Oka, H. (1988). Intravascular coagulation in acute liver failure in rats and its treatment with antithrombin III. Gut, 29(8), 1103–1108. https://doi.org/10.1136/gut.29.8.1103

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