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  • Title: Fibrinogenolytic afibrinogenemia after envenomation by western diamondback rattlesnake (Crotalus atrox).
    Author: Budzynski AZ, Pandya BV, Rubin RN, Brizuela BS, Soszka T, Stewart GJ.
    Journal: Blood; 1984 Jan; 63(1):1-14. PubMed ID: 6537796.
    Abstract:
    The absence of fibrinogen and the presence of plasmic fragments X, Y, D, and E were demonstrated in a patient bitten by a western diamondback rattlesnake, Crotalus atrox. The factor VIII level and the platelet count were within normal limits. There were distinct changes of protease inhibitors in the patient's plasma. Alpha-1-protease inhibitor was elevated. Antithrombin-III was only slightly decreased after the envenomation, but alpha 2-antiplasmin and alpha 2-macroglobulin were initially significantly lowered, returning to normal values in 38 and 3 days, respectively. Plasmin-alpha 2-antiplasmin complex was present until day 10 after the envenomation. However, purified plasminogen was not activated in vitro by the venom. Cultured endothelial and smooth muscle cells from human blood vessels released an increased amount of plasminogen activator upon incubation with the venom. The release did not result from cell lysis. Platelets in normal human platelet-rich plasma were aggregated by 10 micrograms/ml of the venom, without serotonin secretion. The aggregation kinetics and serotonin secretion induced by adenosine diphosphate (ADP) or arachidonate were not significantly affected by the venom at 1-10 micrograms/ml. It is concluded that the predominant mechanism of afibrinogenemia in the patient after Crotalus atrox bite resulted from primary fibrinogenolysis and not from a consumptive coagulopathy. The lytic state seemed to be induced through an indirect activation of plasminogen by vascular plasminogen activator, which was probably released from endothelial cells and smooth muscle cells by the snake venom.
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