Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
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Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0001511 (
Adhesion
)
5,955
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Patients whose platelets are deficient in glycoprotein (GP) Ib, IIb-IIIa (thrombasthenia), or granule substances (storage pool deficiency,
SPD
) were studied to define further the properties of platelets that mediate platelet adhesion and thrombus formation on subendothelium. Both nonanticoagulated and citrated blood were exposed to everted, de-endothelialized rabbit vessel segments under controlled flow conditions and shear rates varying from 650 to 3,300 sec-1. Morphometry was used to measure platelet thrombus dimensions and the percentage of the subendothelial surface covered with contact (C) or spread (S) platelets.
Adhesion
was defined as C + S. The results in
SPD
demonstrated (1) reduced thrombus dimensions in delta-
SPD
(pure dense granule deficiency) in proportion to the magnitude of the dense granule defect; (2) an even greater reduction in thrombus dimensions in patients with combined deficiencies of alpha and dense granules (alpha delta-
SPD
); and (3) impaired platelet adhesion at several conditions in alpha delta-
SPD
and, in delta-
SPD
, a hematocrit-dependent impairment of adhesion in citrated blood at 2,600 sec-1. In thrombasthenia, platelets were present as a monolayer on the subendothelial surface in both nonanticoagulated and citrated blood, indicating an absolute requirement for GPIIb-IIIa in promoting platelet-platelet interaction at all shear rates and perfusion times. Two types of abnormalities in platelet-vessel wall interactions were observed. In nonanticoagulated blood, the percentage of platelets in the C phase was consistently increased at all shear rates, but C + S values were normal. These observations indicate that platelets deficient in GPIIb-IIIa do not spread normally on the subendothelial surface exposed to nonanticoagulated blood. With citrated blood, the C + S value in thrombasthenia was reduced at both 800 and 2,600 sec-1, as in von Willebrand's disease, and a similar degree of reduction (about 50%) was observed in normal blood treated with a monoclonal antibody to GPIIb-IIIa. The findings, together with theoretical considerations, are consistent with an hypothesis that GPIIb-IIIa mediates the spreading of platelets on subendothelium following the initial attachment through GPIb and that GPIIb-IIIa may be considered an adhesion site on the platelet membrane. Abnormalities of GPIIb-IIIa may, depending on the conditions of study, result in either increased values of C platelets or decreased values of C + S. The results of the study further suggest that a complex interaction of platelet granule factors and membrane GP mediate platelet adhesion and thrombus formation.
...
PMID:Platelet adhesion and thrombus formation on subendothelium in platelets deficient in glycoproteins IIb-IIIa, Ib, and storage granules. 293 7