• Anesthesiology · Dec 2006

    Effect of high- and low-molecular-weight low-substituted hydroxyethyl starch on blood coagulation during acute normovolemic hemodilution in pigs.

    • Caroline Thyes, Caveh Madjdpour, Philippe Frascarolo, Thierry Buclin, Marco Bürki, Andreas Fisch, Marc-Alexander Burmeister, Lars Asmis, and Donat R Spahn.
    • Department of Anesthesiology, Division of Clinical Pharmacology and Toxicology, University Hospital Lausanne, Switzerland.
    • Anesthesiology. 2006 Dec 1; 105 (6): 1228-37.

    BackgroundHydroxyethyl starches (HES) with lower impact on blood coagulation but longer intravascular persistence are of clinical interest. The current study aimed to investigate in vivo the isolated effect of molecular weight on blood coagulation during progressive acute normovolemic hemodilution.MethodsTwenty-four pigs were normovolemically hemodiluted up to a total exchange of 50 ml . kg . body weight of HES 650/0.42 or HES 130/0.42. Serial blood sampling was performed to measure HES plasma concentration and to assess blood coagulation. Concentration-effect relations were analyzed by linear regression, followed by the Student t test on regression parameters.ResultsBlood coagulation was increasingly compromised toward hypocoagulability by acute normovolemic hemodilution with both treatments (P < 0.01). Significantly greater impact on activated partial thromboplastin time (P = 0.04) and significantly stronger decrease of maximal amplitude (P = 0.04), angle alpha (P = 0.02), and coagulation index (P = 0.02) was seen after acute normovolemic hemodilution with HES 650/0.42 as compared with HES 130/0.42. Except for factor VIII (P = 0.04), no significant differences between both treatments were observed when relating antihemostatic effects to HES plasma concentrations (P > 0.05). A significantly lesser decrease of hemoglobin concentration has been found with HES 650/0.42 as compared with HES 130/0.42 (P < 0.01) in relation to HES plasma concentrations.ConclusionHigh-molecular-weight HES (650/0.42) shows a moderately greater antihemostatic effect than low-molecular-weight HES (130/0.42) during acute normovolemic hemodilution. However, similar effects on hemostasis were observed with both treatments when observed antihemostatic effects were related to measured HES plasma concentrations. In addition, HES 650/0.42 may have a lower efficacy in immediately restoring plasma volume.

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