Vascular Prostacyclin and Plasminogen Activator Activity in Experimental and Clinical Conditions of Disturbed Haemostasis or Thrombosis — Giovanni de Gaetano (1979) | RDL Network
In several experimental and clinical conditions associated with thrombotic tendency, or complicated by thrombotic episodes, either prostacyclin (which inhibits platelet aggregation) or plasminogen activator (which promotes fibrinolysis), or both, appear to be decreased in the vessel wall. In other conditions, however, either activity may not change or even be increased. Possibly, vascular damage is followed by an early stimulation of both activities (a defence mechanism?) which may be subsequently reduced or exhausted. While the role of vascular plasminogen activator in haemorrhagic conditions is apparently unknown, prostacyclin activity appears to be markedly enhanced both in experimental animals and in patients with uraemia and bleeding complications. There is a suggestive evidence that uraemic plasma powerfully stimulates vascular prostacyclin generation.
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