SACCM 166: Thrombolytic Agents Flashcards

1
Q

What are the 3 different activators of Plasminogen?

A

tissue-type plasminogen activator (tPA)
urinary-type plasminogen activator (uPA)
contact plasminogen activator pathway (FXII, prekallikrein, kininogen)

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2
Q

What are the steps of Fibrinogen cleavage by plasmin?

A
  1. alpha chains are cleaved –> alpha chain fragments –> X fragment left (D-E-D)
  2. D fragment cleaved, Y fragment left (D-E)
  3. cleaved to single D and E fragments –> fibrin degradatin products
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3
Q

Why do D-dimers indicate presence of previous clots?

A

D dimers are a complex of D-D with a concurrent free E complex
remnants of Y-chain needed to create D-D complex (i.e., D-dimer) –> Y-chain formed when fibrin binds with other fibrin

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4
Q

What are the 3 most important plasmin inhibitors and where are they synthesized?

A
  • PAI-1 (platelet alpha granules)
  • alpha-2 antiplasmin (liver)
  • TAFI (liver)
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5
Q

How does TAFI inhibit fibrinolysis?

A

fibrin residues –> C terminal lysine –> usually have a positive feedback on ongoing plasmin binding to fibrin
TAFI –> removes C-terminal lysine fibrin residues

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6
Q

How is streptokinase produced?

A

by streptococci

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7
Q

What is the half-life of tissue plasminogen activator?

A

5 minutes

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8
Q

what does PAI-1 bind to?

A

fibrin

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9
Q

What does alpha-2 anti-plasmin bind to?

A

plasminogen or plasmin

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