PMID: 9422123Jan 1, 1994Paper

Protocol and preliminary results of a clinical study for comparison of solvent/detergent-inactivated plasma VIP versus FFP with special consideration of the balance of hemostasis

Beiträge zur Infusionstherapie und Transfusionsmedizin = Contributions to infusion therapy and transfusion medicine
K H BeckV Kretschmer

Abstract

Solvent/detergent virus-inactivated plasma (VIP) contains markedly reduced protein S (PS) and alpha 2-antiplasmin (APL) beside other slightly decreased inhibitors. This could possibly be critical for the balance of hemostasis in diseases in which plasma inhibitors are reduced. A heterogeneous group of 14 patients with 18 plasma transfusions (12 FFP/24 VIP, 2 units per transfusion) was investigated. The patients suffered from dilution coagulopathy, liver disease, disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC), hyperfibrinolysis, or received massive transfusions. Prothrombin fragment 1 + 2, fibrin monomers, D-Dimers, thrombin-AT III complexes, antiplasmin-plasmin complexes and fibrinogen degradation products as markers of activated coagulation (MAC) were measured. Blood samples were taken before and after plasma replacement. Significant differences between VIP and FFP should be recognized by comparing the ratio of MAC after/MAC before plasma transfusion. Patients showed an average inhibitor plasma level of AT III 51%, protein C 44%, PS 63%, and APL 52%. Only the F 1 + 2 ratio was obviously higher in the VIP group but not significantly. So the remaining MAC ratios did not show any significant difference. Our preliminary data showed ...Continue Reading

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