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A case-control study indicates that coagulation imbalance is associated with arteriosclerosis and markers of endothelial dysfunction in kidney failure.

Kidney International 2020 December 23
Endothelial dysfunction, one of many causes of arterial changes in end-stage kidney disease (kidney failure). is a likely link between early vascular aging and the risk of thrombosis or bleeding in this condition To evaluate this, we compared links between arterial stiffness and endothelial/coagulation factors in 55 patients receiving hemodialysis therapy and 57 age-/sex-matched control individuals. Arterial stiffness was assessed from carotid-femoral pulse wave velocity, and coagulation status from the endogenous thrombin generating potential. Markers of endothelial dysfunction (von Willebrand factor, tissue factor pathway inhibitor), neutrophil extracellular traps and tissue factor-positive extracellular vesicles were higher in patients with kidney failure. Prothrombin fragments 1 and 2, and D-dimer markers of in vivo coagulation activation-were also higher. However, in vitro in the presence of platelets, endogenous thrombin generating potential was lower and its downregulation by activated protein C impaired. Antiplatelet drugs did not affect these parameters. In multiple regression analysis, prothrombin fragments 1 and 2, D-dimer, factor VIII and monocyte-derived tissue factor-positive extracellular vesicles correlated with higher carotid-femoral pulse wave velocity. In patients with kidney failure, in vivo hypercoagulability occurred with reduced thrombin generation in platelet-rich plasma, likely explaining the opposing thrombotic and bleeding tendencies in patients with kidney failure. Importantly, arteriosclerosis is more closely related to a prothrombotic state. Thus, coagulation changes plus arterial stiffness highlight a major therapeutic challenge for anticoagulant and antiplatelet drug use.

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