Monitoring of the Blood Response in Blood Purification
- 1 April 1993
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Artificial Organs
- Vol. 17 (4) , 260-266
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1525-1594.1993.tb00577.x
Abstract
A principal objective of monitoring the blood response in procedures such as hemodialysis and cardiopulmonary bypass is to achieve an enhanced understanding of the relationship between blood component alterations and the biomaterials employed. The aim in a study of blood‐biomaterial interactions of deriving a correlation between a characteristic of the biomaterial and a representative parameter of the blood response can be influenced in a clinical situation by antithrombotic agents, multimaterial contact, device utilization, blood condition, drug therapy, and the nature of the application. The selection of parameters representative of the blood response may require a compromise between the advantages of multiparameter assessment and the benefit of measuring a single parameter by a consistent methodology. Representative parameters are protein adsorption, platelet reactions, intrinsic coagulation and the contact activation phase, fibrinolysis, leukocyte alterations, and complement activation. Assessment during clinical application can be approached by consideration of blood response patterns.Keywords
This publication has 11 references indexed in Scilit:
- Immobilisation of Macromolecules for Obtaining Biocompatible SurfacesPublished by Springer Nature ,1993
- Biomaterials for Blood Tubing: The Application of Plasticised Poly(Vinyl Chloride)The International Journal of Artificial Organs, 1992
- Blood Compatibility in Cardiopulmonary BypassPublished by Springer Nature ,1992
- Complement Activation Produced by BiomaterialsArtificial Organs, 1988
- Activation of the complement system at the interface between blood and artificial surfacesBiomaterials, 1988
- Complement activation by hydroxyethylmethacrylate‐ethylmethacrylate copolymersJournal of Biomedical Materials Research, 1987
- Clinical Relevance of Biocompatibility — The Material Cannot Be Divorced from the DevicePublished by Springer Nature ,1987
- Biocompatibility: Bioengineering AspectsArtificial Organs, 1986
- The Physiology of HemostasisPublished by Springer Nature ,1983
- Interaction of high molecular weight kininogen, factor XII, and fibrinogen in plasma at interfacesBlood, 1980