“…Nevertheless, if we consider that studies show up to 70% of patients undergoing CABG with positive antibodies, it may not have other clinical findings of HIT and, the absence of antibody does not exclude the diagnosis of HIT, with possible further seroconversion [5]. Moreover, in a recent study [33], the 4Ts score is compared with the laboratory diagnosis of HIT and then the perspective of this score to be a clinical tool for screening is discussed, in order to identify the individual risk of each patient to have this disease.…”