Protamine--antagonist to heparin.
- 19 May 1973
- journal article
- review article
- Vol. 108 (10) , 1291-7
Abstract
Protamine is used for titration of heparin in vitro for diagnosis of hemorrhagic states and for neutralization of heparin in vivo to terminate heparinization. The protamine equivalent varies with the heparin preparation, conditions of testing and, in vivo, with the amount of heparin present in the circulation. The latter depends on time after administration and the hemodynamic and metabolic state of the patient. Protamine, when injected rapidly, will release histamine and agglutinate platelets. Bleeding (spontaneous hemorrhage) demonstrates a multiple breakdown of hemostatic mechanisms due to surgical stress, drugs, exposure of the blood to foreign surfaces, etc. Simple rules for the amount of protamine required for an individual patient based on clinical judgement will be satisfactory in most cases. When hemostasis is not achieved, it must be appreciated that heparin and protamine are only part of a complex deteriorating situation.This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- Is Protamine a Clinically Important Anticoagulant?Anesthesiology, 1971
- THE LABORATORY CONTROL OF INTRAVENOUS HEPARIN THERAPYThe Medical Journal of Australia, 1971
- Laboratory identification of intravascular coagulation. The serial dilution protamine sulfate test for the detection of fibrin monomer and fibrin degradation products.1971
- Comparative Neutralization of Lung‐and Mucosal‐Derived Heparin by Protamine Sulfate Using In Vitro and In Vivo MethodsJournal of Pharmaceutical Sciences, 1971
- Total cardiopulmonary bypass, myocardial contractility, and the administration of protamine sulfateThe Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, 1971
- A collaborative study of heparins from different sources.1970
- 3 The Pharmacology of Heparin and HeparinoidsPublished by Elsevier ,1967
- The Elimination from Plasma of Intravenous Heparin An Experimental Study on Dogs and HumansActa Medica Scandinavica, 1963
- [Exact determination of the actual blood heparin content at the moment when it is neutralized by polybrene or protamine sulfate].1962
- The Tennessee Academy of ScienceScience, 1938