2009
DOI: 10.1182/blood.v114.22.1064.1064
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Effect of Rivaroxaban, An Oral Direct Factor Xa Inhibitor, On Whole Blood Clot Permeation and Thrombolysis: Critical Role of Red Blood Cells.

Abstract: 1064 Poster Board I-86 Introduction: Decreased fibrinolysis has been reported in venous thrombosis. Thrombus degradation depends on its structure: thicker fibrin fibers are permeable to blood flow and highly susceptible to fibrinolytic enzymes, while thinner fibers are poorly permeable to flow and are resistant to fibrinolysis. Thrombin concentration present at the time of gelation profoundly influences fibrin clot structure: decrease in thromb… Show more

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Cited by 8 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…Therapeutically relevant concentrations of rivaroxaban (80-100 nM) are sufficient to cause almost complete inhibition of thrombin generation [6]. In addition, rivaroxaban increases clot permeability and degradability, which may also contribute to its antithrombotic effect [7].…”
Section: Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Therapeutically relevant concentrations of rivaroxaban (80-100 nM) are sufficient to cause almost complete inhibition of thrombin generation [6]. In addition, rivaroxaban increases clot permeability and degradability, which may also contribute to its antithrombotic effect [7].…”
Section: Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Clot-associated factor Xa has been shown to be enzymatically active in vitro and is able to activate prothrombin to thrombin (66) thus contributing to clot-associated procoagulant activity (67).Therefore, direct inhibition of clotassociated factor Xa could be an effective and localised approach to prevent thrombus growth. Recent evidence suggests that rivaroxaban, a direct factor Xa inhibitor, also affects clot structure by increasing the permeability and degradability of the clot, thus promoting clot lysis (68).…”
Section: Direct Factor Xa Inhibitionmentioning
confidence: 99%