Tranexamic acid mediates proinflammatory and anti-inflammatory signaling via complement C5a regulation in a plasminogen activator–dependent manner
暂无分享,去创建一个
M. Yaffe | E. Moore | D. Lim | H. Moore | M. Chapman | Y. Kong | G. Sriram | C. Barrett
[1] E. Bulger,et al. Severely injured trauma patients with admission hyperfibrinolysis: Is there a role of tranexamic acid? Findings from the PROPPR trial , 2018, The journal of trauma and acute care surgery.
[2] M. Yaffe,et al. Blood clotting and traumatic injury with shock mediates complement‐dependent neutrophil priming for extracellular ROS, ROS‐dependent organ injury and coagulopathy , 2018, Clinical and experimental immunology.
[3] M. Yaffe,et al. Human neutrophil elastase mediates fibrinolysis shutdown through competitive degradation of plasminogen and generation of angiostatin , 2017, The journal of trauma and acute care surgery.
[4] A. Sauaia,et al. Acute Fibrinolysis Shutdown after Injury Occurs Frequently and Increases Mortality: A Multicenter Evaluation of 2,540 Severely Injured Patients. , 2016, Journal of the American College of Surgeons.
[5] Jinan Li,et al. Plasminogen is a critical regulator of cutaneous wound healing , 2016, Thrombosis and Haemostasis.
[6] James G. Chandler,et al. Overwhelming tPA release, not PAI-1 degradation, is responsible for hyperfibrinolysis in severely injured trauma patients , 2016, The journal of trauma and acute care surgery.
[7] C. Wade,et al. The impact of tranexamic acid on mortality in injured patients with hyperfibrinolysis , 2015, The journal of trauma and acute care surgery.
[8] D. Cines,et al. Endogenous plasminogen activators mediate progressive intracerebral hemorrhage after traumatic brain injury in mice. , 2015, Blood.
[9] C. Schulman,et al. Do all trauma patients benefit from tranexamic acid? , 2014, The journal of trauma and acute care surgery.
[10] C. Wade,et al. Elevated Tissue Plasminogen Activator and Reduced Plasminogen Activator Inhibitor Promote Hyperfibrinolysis in Trauma Patients , 2014, Shock.
[11] E. Moore,et al. Trauma-Induced Coagulopathy: An Institution’s 35 Year Perspective on Practice and Research , 2014, Scandinavian journal of surgery : SJS : official organ for the Finnish Surgical Society and the Scandinavian Surgical Society.
[12] E. Moore,et al. Tranexamic acid in trauma: How should we use it? , 2013, The journal of trauma and acute care surgery.
[13] C. Longstaff,et al. Regulation of fibrinolysis by C‐terminal lysines operates through plasminogen and plasmin but not tissue‐type plasminogen activator , 2012, Journal of thrombosis and haemostasis : JTH.
[14] C. Wade,et al. Hyperfibrinolysis at admission is an uncommon but highly lethal event associated with shock and prehospital fluid administration , 2012, The journal of trauma and acute care surgery.
[15] P. L. McCormack,et al. Tranexamic Acid , 2012, Drugs.
[16] J. Weitz,et al. A High Affinity Interaction of Plasminogen with Fibrin Is Not Essential for Efficient Activation by Tissue-type Plasminogen Activator* , 2011, The Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[17] John D Lambris,et al. Molecular Intercommunication between the Complement and Coagulation Systems , 2010, The Journal of Immunology.
[18] G. Fantuzzi,et al. Urokinase-Type Plasminogen Activator Plays Essential Roles in Macrophage Chemotaxis and Skeletal Muscle Regeneration1 , 2008, The Journal of Immunology.
[19] M. Cohen,et al. ROLE OF THE ALTERNATIVE PATHWAY IN THE EARLY COMPLEMENT ACTIVATION FOLLOWING MAJOR TRAUMA , 2007, Shock.
[20] K. Hajjar,et al. Molecular mechanisms of fibrinolysis , 2005, British journal of haematology.
[21] T. Tuan,et al. Plasminogen activator/plasmin system: A major player in wound healing? , 2003, Wound repair and regeneration : official publication of the Wound Healing Society [and] the European Tissue Repair Society.
[22] T. Bugge,et al. Plasminogen activators direct reorganization of the liver lobule after acute injury. , 2001, The American journal of pathology.
[23] V. Ploplis,et al. The development of bleomycin-induced pulmonary fibrosis in mice deficient for components of the fibrinolytic system. , 2000, The American journal of pathology.
[24] M. Kramer,et al. Plasminogen activation in healing human wounds. , 1994, The American journal of pathology.
[25] M. Nesheim,et al. Lys-plasminogen is a significant intermediate in the activation of Glu-plasminogen during fibrinolysis in vitro. , 1992, The Journal of biological chemistry.
[26] S. Thorsen,et al. Initial plasmin-degradation of fibrin as the basis of a positive feed-back mechanism in fibrinolysis. , 1984, European journal of biochemistry.
[27] P. McKee,et al. The binding of human plasminogen to fibrin and fibrinogen. , 1983, The Journal of biological chemistry.
[28] Peter A. Ward,et al. The complement system , 2010, Cell and Tissue Research.
[29] E. Fox,et al. Trends in 1029 trauma deaths at a level 1 trauma center: Impact of a bleeding control bundle of care. , 2017, Injury.
[30] A. Sauaia,et al. Postinjury Inflammation and Organ Dysfunction. , 2017, Critical care clinics.
[31] A. Sauaia,et al. Featured Articles for CME Credit December 2014 Hyperfibrinolysis, physiologic fibrinolysis, and fibrinolysis shutdown: The spectrum of postinjury fibrinolysis and relevance to antifibrinolytic therapy , 2014 .
[32] S. Arabia,et al. Tranexamic Acid A Review of its Use in the Treatment of Hyperfibrinolysis , 2012 .
[33] R. Peto,et al. Effects of tranexamic acid on death, vascular occlusive events, and blood transfusion in trauma patients with significant haemorrhage (CRASH-2): a randomised, placebo-controlled trial. , 2010, Lancet.
[34] Peter Rhee,et al. Preventable or potentially preventable mortality at a mature trauma center. , 2007, The Journal of trauma.
[35] Y. Takada,et al. Enhancement of the activation of Glu-plasminogen by urokinase in the simultaneous presence of tranexamic acid or fibrin. , 1989, Haemostasis.