Objective: To investigate the in vitro effects of detergent sclerosants sodium tetradecyl sulphate (STS) and polidocanol (POL) on clot formation and lysis.
Materials and methods: clot kinetics were assessed in whole blood by thromboelastography (TEG®) and rotational thromboelastometry (ROTEM®). Fibrinogen was measured by the Clauss method in plasma and factor XIII (FXIII) by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). Turbidity measurements were used to assess clot lysis in plasma, and fibrinolysis in non-cross-linked and cross-linked fibrin. D-dimer was measured by VIDAS®, STA®Liatest® and AxSYM® assays.
Results: Strong clots were formed at low sclerosant concentrations (0.075-0.1%). At midrange concentrations (0.15% STS, 0.15-0.3% POL), both agents inhibited the contribution of platelets to clot firmness and formed weak clots prone to lysis. At higher concentrations (STS ≥ 0.3% and POL ≥ 0.6%), clot formation was inhibited. STS destroyed FXIII at ≥ 0.15% and fibrinogen at ≥ 0.6%. Neither sclerosant had a significant effect on cross-linked fibrin, but STS had a lytic effect on non-cross-linked fibrin. STS caused an artefactual elevation of D-dimer in the VIDAS® assay when fibrinogen was present.
Conclusion: Detergent sclerosants demonstrated a trimodal effect on clot formation, initiating strong clots at low concentrations, weak clots at midrange concentrations and preventing clot formation at higher concentrations. Neither agent had fibrinolytic activity.
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