Fibrin Strands Will Grow from Soluble Fibrin and Hang Up in an In Vitro Microcirculatory Viscoelastic Model: Is This a Major Cause of COVID-19 Associated Coagulopathy?

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Abstract

Viscoelastic testing (VET) by both TEG and ROTEM has demonstrated hypercoagulability early in corona virus disease 2019 (COVID-19) associated coagulopathy (CAC). Additional VET studies demonstrated fibrinolytic shutdown late in a majority of severely ill COVID-19 patients with an associated elevation of D-dimer. Elevated D-dimer confirms that coagulation, followed by fibrinolysis, has occurred. These findings imply that, during CAC, three enzymes—thrombin, Factor XIIIa and plasmin—must have acted in sequence. However, limitations in standard VET analyses preclude exploration of the earliest phases of clot induction, as well as clot formation and clot dissolution in flowing blood. Herein, we describe a novel method illuminating aspects of this unexplored area. In addition, we created an in vitro blood flow model in which the interactions of thrombin, Factor XIII and plasmin with fibrinogen can be studied, allowing the determination of soluble fibrin (SF), the highly unstable form of fibrin that precedes the appearance of a visible clot. This model allows the determination of the SF level at which fibrin microclots begin to form.

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Bull, B. S., Hay, K. L., & Herrmann, P. C. (2022). Fibrin Strands Will Grow from Soluble Fibrin and Hang Up in an In Vitro Microcirculatory Viscoelastic Model: Is This a Major Cause of COVID-19 Associated Coagulopathy? Journal of Clinical Medicine, 11(8). https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm11082084

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