Platelet storage pool deficiency: diagnosis in patients with prolonged bleeding times and normal platelet aggregation
- 1 May 1990
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in British Journal of Haematology
- Vol. 75 (1) , 118-121
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2141.1990.tb02626.x
Abstract
We evaluated 46 patients with prolonged bleeding times, and no demonstrable abnormalities of either von Willebrand factor or platelet aggregation, for possible deficiency of platelet storage pool. Studies of ATP release from thrombin-stimulated platelets and enumeration of dense granules in platelet whole mounts were performed in these patients. Seventeen patients (35%) had both decreased ATP release and decreased numbers of dense granules, suggesting the presence of a storage pool defect. Thus, storage pool deficiency may be present in the absence of the classical aggregation abnormalities. Evidence of storage pool deficiency should be considered in all patients with an isolated unexplained prolongation of the bleeding time. The methods used in this study are readily applicable to most clinical laboratories.This publication has 16 references indexed in Scilit:
- Guidelines on platelet function testing. The British Society for Haematology BCSH Haemostasis and Thrombosis Task Force.Journal of Clinical Pathology, 1988
- Reliability of absent platelet dense bodies as a diagnostic criterion for Hermansky‐Pudlak syndromeAmerican Journal of Hematology, 1987
- Patients with a prolonged bleeding time and normal aggregation tests may have storage pool deficiency: studies on one hundred six patientsBlood, 1987
- Biochemical studies of two patients with the gray platelet syndrome. Selective deficiency of platelet alpha granules.Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1980
- Secretable Storage Pools in PlateletsAnnual Review of Medicine, 1979
- IUMI-AGGREGOMETER - NEW INSTRUMENT FOR SIMULTANEOUS MEASUREMENT OF SECRETION AND AGGREGATION BY PLATELETS1977
- ULTRASTRUCTURAL FEATURES OF ABNORMAL BLOOD-PLATELETS1976