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. 2010 May;103(5):1085-90.
doi: 10.1160/TH09-09-0624. Epub 2010 Feb 19.

Age is a determinant factor for measures of concentration and effect in children requiring unfractionated heparin

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Age is a determinant factor for measures of concentration and effect in children requiring unfractionated heparin

Fiona Newall et al. Thromb Haemost. 2010 May.

Abstract

Previous studies investigating continuous unfractionated heparin (UFH) therapy report age-related differences in UFH response in children, as measured by APTT and anti-Xa assay. This study determined the age-related response following administration of a single UFH bolus of 75-100 IU/kg in children. Venous blood samples were collected from children (n=56) at 15, 30, 45 and 120 minutes post-UFH. Anti-Xa, anti-IIa, APTT, TCT and protamine titration were performed on all samples. Age-dependent differences in the effect and concentration of UFH were identified for the anti-Xa, anti-IIa and protamine titration assays, respectively. In addition, a trend suggesting a proportional increase in anti-Xa and anti-IIa-mediated UFH effect with age was evident. Logistic regression demonstrated an increase in protamine titration of 0.6 IU/ml for every year of age in samples collected 15 minutes post-UFH. UFH-mediated anti-IIa activity was reduced compared to anti-Xa activity across childhood, with a two-fold increase in anti-Xa to anti-IIa ratio in infants less than one year of age compared to teenagers in the setting of high UFH concentrations. This study demonstrates that the previously reported age-dependent response to UFH occurs in the context of an age-dependent serum concentration of UFH. The trend toward increased UFH serum concentration and anticoagulant activity with age may be related to short-term differences in UFH binding to coagulant and competitive plasma proteins in vivo.

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