Elevated levels of activated and inactivated thrombin-activatable fibrinolysis inhibitor in patients with sepsis.
Anahtar kelimeler
Öz
BACKGROUND
In sepsis, large scale inflammatory responses can cause extensive collateral damage to the vasculature, because both coagulation and fibrinolysis are activated unevenly. Thrombin-activatable fibrinolysis inhibitor (TAFI) plays a role in modulating fibrinolysis. Since TAFI can be activated by both thrombin and plasmin, it is thought to be affected in sepsis. Hence, activated and inactivated TAFI (TAFIa/ai) may be used to monitor changes in sepsis.
METHODS
TAFIa/ai-specific in-house ELISA can detect only the TAFIa/ai form, because the ELISA capture agent is potato tuber carboxypeptidase inhibitor (PTCI), which has selective affinity towards only the TAFIa and TAFIai isoforms. TAFIa/ai levels in plasma from 25 patients with sepsis and 19 healthy volunteers were quantitated with the in-house ELISA.
RESULTS
We observed increased TAFIa/ai levels in samples from patients with sepsis (48.7±9.3 ng/mL) than in samples from healthy individuals (10.5±5.9 ng/mL). In contrast, no difference in total TAFI concentration was obtained between sepsis patients and healthy controls. The results suggest that TAFI zymogen was activated and that TAFIa/ai accumulated in sepsis.
CONCLUSIONS
The detection of TAFIa/ai in plasma could provide a useful and simple diagnostic tool for sepsis. Uneven activation of both coagulation and fibrinolysis in sepsis could be caused by the activation of TAFI zymogen and elevation of TAFIa/ai. TAFIa/ai could be a novel marker to monitor sepsis and other blood-related disturbances.