2007
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-3083.2007.01984.x
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The Role of Microparticles in Inflammation and Thrombosis

Abstract: Microparticles (MP) are small membrane‐bound vesicles that circulate in the peripheral blood and play active roles in thrombosis, inflammation and vascular reactivity. While MP can be released from nearly every cell type, most investigation has focused on MP of platelet, leucocyte and endothelial cell origin. Cells can release MP during activation or death. Flow cytometry is the usual method to quantify MP; the small size of these structures and lack of standardization in methodology complicate measurement. As… Show more

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Cited by 179 publications
(173 citation statements)
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References 75 publications
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“…26 These mechanisms imply sustained thrombin generation and short thrombin time in our study. 27 We plan further studies on the plasma-borne amplification and feedback of thrombin, where the proinflammatory role of fibrin and microvesicles 28,29 appear important.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…26 These mechanisms imply sustained thrombin generation and short thrombin time in our study. 27 We plan further studies on the plasma-borne amplification and feedback of thrombin, where the proinflammatory role of fibrin and microvesicles 28,29 appear important.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In systemic autoimmune conditions such as RA, SLE and vasculitis, levels of platelet-derived microparticles were reported to be elevated. 27 A possible role of neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs) is being explored in the pathogenesis of rheumatologic conditions such as SLE. 28 NETs are released during pathogeninduced neutrophil death by a specific pathway referred to as NETosis.…”
Section: Mechanisms Linking Inflammation and Venous Thrombosismentioning
confidence: 99%
“…65,66 The recent availability of diagnostics capable of quantifying MVs of a specific cell origin could be useful for understanding the cells/organs where injury is occurring. This approach will overlap what has been done in oncology.…”
Section: Conflict Of Interestmentioning
confidence: 99%