Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5734155 | Journal of Surgical Research | 2017 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
Humans, swine, and rodents have distinctly different coagulation systems, when evaluated by citrated native TEG. Animals are hypercoagulable with rapid clotting times and clots strengths nearly 50% stronger than humans. These coagulation differences indicate the limitations of previous models of trauma-induced coagulopathy in producing coagulation abnormalities associated with increased bleeding. The inherent hypercoagulable baseline tendencies of these animals may result in subclinical biochemical changes that are not detected by conventional TEG and should be taken into consideration when extrapolated to clinical medicine.
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Authors
Gregory R. MD, Ernest E. MD, Hunter B. MD, Peter J. BA, Miguel DVM, Geoffrey R. MD, Christopher C. MD, PhD, Anirban PhD,