We gave cryoprecipitate to six patients with uremia and bleeding times prolonged to more than 15 minutes. After the infusion, all patients had shortened bleeding times; the times of five became normal. In four patients control of major bleeding episodes was attained, and five underwent major surgical or invasive procedures, with good hemostasis. After infusion the time before the nadir of the bleeding time was reached was between one and 12 hours. The bleeding time returned to pretreatment levels by 24 hours after infusion in five patients, and by 36 hours in the other patient. Platelet-aggregation studies before infusion gave normal results in three patients and abnormal results in three. There wasno change after infusion. Before infusion, levels of Factor VIII coagulant activity and Factor VIII von Willebrand activity were normal, Factor VIII-related antigen was increased, and crossed immunoelectrophoresis of Factor VIII-related antigen was normal. Our findings suggest that cryoprecipitate can temporarily correct the bleeding tendency in patients with uremia.
The authors measured the template bleeding time in 11 normal people before and 2, 4, 12, 24, and 48 hours after the subjects ingested a single dose of 74 mg of aspirin (ASA). The entire experiment was repeated twice at two-week intervals, with the dose of ASA increased to 325 mg and finally 3,900 mg. The mean increase was maximal at 4 and 12 hours, regardless of the dose administered, with a return to baseline by 48 hours. The authors then performed bleeding times in a prospective randomized double-blinded fashion on an additional 39 subjects at baseline and seven hours after they ingested either placebo or ASA 325 mg. The mean baseline bleeding time was 5.2 minutes (SD +/- 1.4), with a mean prolongation after ASA of 2.1 minutes (SD +/- 1.9). The authors identified 5 of 37 (14%) subjects as hyper-responders (HRs) using the criterion of a bleeding time prolongation of greater than 5.9 minutes (greater than 2 SD beyond the mean prolongation). Neither baseline bleeding time, threshold sensitivity of collagen-induced platelet aggregation, nor other tests of hemostatic function discriminated HRs from normals. The authors conclude that in subjects with normal baseline bleeding times, a prolongation of greater than 5.9 minutes when measured seven hours after the administration of a single dose of 325 mg of ASA can discriminate HRs from normals.
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