PMID: 8607111Nov 1, 1995Paper

A comparative study of the anticoagulant and anti-thrombotic effects of unfractionated heparin and a low molecular weight heparin (Fraxiparine) in an experimental model of human venous thrombosis

Thrombosis and Haemostasis
A DiquélouY Cadroy

Abstract

We have compared the anticoagulant and the antithrombotic effects of unfractionated heparin (Calciparine) and low molecular weight heparin (Fraxiparine) in an experimental human venous thrombosis model. One single subcutaneous injection of Calciparine or Fraxiparine was administered to healthy male volunteers at one month interval in a randomised and cross-over design. Ten subjects received doses used in man for preventing venous thrombosis (5,000 IU and 3,075 IU, respectively), and seven other subjects received curative doses (12,500 IU and 6,150 IU, respectively). Thrombus formation was measured 3 h and 8 h after drug administration. Non-anticoagulated human blood was drawn for 5 min directly from an antecubital vein over confluent cultured endothelial cells positioned in a parallel-plate perfusion chamber. The cells were previously stimulated for 4 h with lipopolysaccharides (10 micrograms/ml) and interleukin 1 beta (50 U/ml), resulting in optimal expression of biological active tissue factor. The wall shear rate at the cell surface was 50 s-1 and mimicked venous blood flow conditions. Immunologically quantified fibrin deposition on the stimulated cells was reduced only by curative doses of Calciparine and Fraxiparine at 3 h...Continue Reading

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