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Effects of hyperthermal stress on the fibrinolytic system
34
Citations
13
References
1996
Year
The effects of hyperthermal stress on the coagulation and fibrinolytic systems were examined in five healthy subjects who took a 3-min 47 degrees C hot-spring bath. After a 3-min 47 degrees C bath, the sublingual temperature was transiently increased about 1.8 degrees C, returning to the baseline level within 60 min. The plasma level of plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 antigen (PAI-1) was transiently increased 15 min after the start of bathing and returned to the pre-bathing level 360 min later. The plasma levels of tissue plasminogen activator antigen, alpha 2 plasmin inhibitor activity, plasmin-antiplasmin complex, thrombin-antithrombin III complex, and thrombomodulin antigen were not influenced by the bath. The in vivo result correlated well with the in vitro result that PAI-1 was released from cultured endothelial cells by heating. These findings suggest that the increase in plasma PAI-1 level may be due to the direct hyperthermal action of the very hot hot-spring bath on the endothelial cells and that acute hyperthermal stress may decrease the fibrinolytic capacity, leading to the occurrence of thrombotic events.
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