Citrate anticoagulation and the dynamics of thrombin generation

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Abstract

Background: Sodium citrate has been used as an anticoagulant to stabilize blood and blood products for over 100years, presumably by sequestering Ca++ ions in vitro. Anticoagulation of blood without chelation can be achieved by inhibition of the contact pathway by corn trypsin inhibitor (CTI). Objective: To evaluate the influence of citrate anticoagulation on the performance of blood, platelet-rich and platelet-poor plasma assays. Methods: Blood was anticoagulated in three ways: by collection into citrate, CTI and citrate with CTI. Plasma was prepared using each anticoagulation regimen. Functional analyses included calibrated automated thrombography, thromboelastography, plasma clotting, the synthetic coagulation proteome and platelet aggregation. Coagulation reactions were initiated with tissue factor-phospholipid and Ca++ (when indicated). Results: In all cases, citrate anticoagulation resulted in reaction dynamics significantly altered relative to blood or plasma stabilized with CTI alone. Subsequent experiments showed that calcium citrate itself impairs coagulation dynamics. Conclusion: Coagulation analyses using blood that has been exposed to citrate and recalcified do not yield reliable depictions of the natural dynamics of blood coagulation processes. © 2007 International Society on Thrombosis and Haemostasis.

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Mann, K. G., Whelihan, M. F., Butenas, S., & Orfeo, T. (2007). Citrate anticoagulation and the dynamics of thrombin generation. Journal of Thrombosis and Haemostasis, 5(10), 2055–2061. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1538-7836.2007.02710.x

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