Journal article
Hypercoagulability in chronic kidney disease is associated with coagulation activation but not endothelial function
Thrombosis Research, Vol.123(2), pp.374-380
2008
Abstract
Introduction
Patients with chronic kidney disease exhibit features of a hypercoagulable state and have endothelial dysfunction, which may contribute to their increased cardiovascular risk. We examined the relationship between coagulation activation and vascular function in patients with chronic kidney disease.
Materials and Methods
We measured parameters of the tissue factor pathway of blood coagulation (tissue factor, factor VIIc and factor X); natural inhibitors (tissue factor pathway inhibitor, protein C, free and total protein S, antithrombin III) and markers of coagulation activation (thrombin-antithrombin complexes, prothrombin fragment 1 + 2) in 66 stage 4&5 chronic kidney disease patients and 36 healthy controls. Their relationship with markers of vascular function (flow mediated dilatation, soluble E-selectin and thrombomodulin) and a mediator of inflammation (interleukin-6) was determined.
Results
Up-regulation of the tissue factor pathway (increased tissue factor and factor VIIc), increased prothrombin fragment 1 + 2 and significant reductions in antithrombin III and the ratio of free protein S: total protein S were found in patients compared to healthy controls. Increased tissue factor antigen was significantly and independently correlated with creatinine and interleukin-6 (P < 0.001). Factor X and antithrombin III were both reduced in chronic kidney disease and correlated (r = 0.58; P < 0.001). Changes in coagulation and anti-coagulation were independent of all measures of endothelial function.
Conclusions
Significant activation of the TF pathway of coagulation and depletion or reduction of some natural anticoagulants in chronic kidney disease was correlated with the degree of renal dysfunction, but not correlated with the abnormalities of vascular function. These data are consistent with a hypercoagulable state in chronic kidney disease that may be independent of endothelial based regulation but associated with an inflammatory state.
Details
- Title
- Hypercoagulability in chronic kidney disease is associated with coagulation activation but not endothelial function
- Authors/Creators
- M.J. Adams (Author/Creator) - University of TasmaniaA.B. Irish (Author/Creator)G.F. Watts (Author/Creator) - The University of Western AustraliaR. Oostryck (Author/Creator) - Curtin UniversityG.K. Dogra (Author/Creator) - Royal Perth Hospital
- Publication Details
- Thrombosis Research, Vol.123(2), pp.374-380
- Publisher
- Elsevier
- Identifiers
- 991005542776607891
- Copyright
- © 2008 Elsevier Ltd
- Murdoch Affiliation
- Murdoch University
- Language
- English
- Resource Type
- Journal article
UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)
This output has contributed to the advancement of the following goals:
Source: InCites
Metrics
25 Record Views
InCites Highlights
These are selected metrics from InCites Benchmarking & Analytics tool, related to this output
- Collaboration types
- Domestic collaboration
- Citation topics
- 1 Clinical & Life Sciences
- 1.75 Blood Clotting
- 1.75.326 Antiphospholipid Syndrome
- Web Of Science research areas
- Hematology
- Peripheral Vascular Disease
- ESI research areas
- Clinical Medicine