Coronary thrombolysis with tissue-type plasminogen activator in patients with evolving myocardial infarction

FV Werf, PA Ludbrook, SR Bergmann… - … England Journal of …, 1984 - Mass Medical Soc
FV Werf, PA Ludbrook, SR Bergmann, AJ Tiefenbrunn, KAA Fox, H Geest, M Verstraete…
New England Journal of Medicine, 1984Mass Medical Soc
Tissue-type plasminogen activator is a naturally occurring, clot-selective activator of
fibrinolysis. We recently reported that human tissue-type plasminogen activator isolated from
a Bowes-melanoma-tissue-culture supernate lysed coronary thrombi in dogs without
depleting circulating fibrinogen or α2-antiplasmin, in contrast to the case with streptokinase
and urokinase. In the present study coronary thrombolysis, confirmed angiographically, was
induced within 19 to 50 minutes with intravenous or intracoronary tissue-type plasminogen …
Abstract
Tissue-type plasminogen activator is a naturally occurring, clot-selective activator of fibrinolysis. We recently reported that human tissue-type plasminogen activator isolated from a Bowes-melanoma-tissue-culture supernate lysed coronary thrombi in dogs without depleting circulating fibrinogen or α2-antiplasmin, in contrast to the case with streptokinase and urokinase. In the present study coronary thrombolysis, confirmed angiographically, was induced within 19 to 50 minutes with intravenous or intracoronary tissue-type plasminogen activator in six of seven patients with evolving myocardial infarction. Circulating fibrinogen, plasminogen, and α2-antiplasmin were not depleted by this agent, in contrast to the case in the two patients subsequently given streptokinase. In the one patient in whom lysis was not inducible with tissue-type plasminogen activator, it was also not inducible with streptokinase.
These observations indicate that clot-selective coronary thrombolysis can be induced in patients with evolving myocardial infarction by means of tissue-type plasminogen activator, without concomitant induction of a systemic lytic state. Definition of its therapeutic benefit must await greater availability of the agent and the performance of appropriate clinical trials. (N Engl J Med 1984; 310:609–13.)
The New England Journal Of Medicine