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Endotoxin binding to platelets in blood from patients with a sepsis syndrome.

28

Citations

20

References

1994

Year

Abstract

Endotoxin, the lipopolysaccharide cell wall constituent of Gram-negative bacteria, produces symptoms of the Gram-negative sepsis syndrome. By measuring endotoxin in blood from septic patients it may be possible to select a subpopulation of patients in which mortality can be prevented by treatment with anti-endotoxin antibodies. We evaluated the performance of an endotoxin-free blood-collection tube. Within-run and between-run CVs of our endotoxin assay were 4-18% and 8-20%, respectively. In endotoxin-positive samples (LPS > or = 6 ng/L), the concentration of endotoxin in platelet-rich plasma was significantly higher (P < 0.001) than in platelet-poor plasma. Apparent binding of endotoxin to platelets ranged from 0% to 92%. The correlation between the apparent percentage binding of LPS to platelets and the platelet count in platelet-rich plasma is linear and positive, but LPS is not bound solely to platelets. We conclude that endotoxin must be measured in platelet-rich plasma.

References

YearCitations

1990

4K

1988

1.7K

1991

1.6K

1989

1.1K

1993

1.1K

1989

810

1978

642

1985

377

1987

219

1992

187

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