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Published byFrédéric Normand Modified over 5 years ago
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The role of antithrombin III in the perioperative management of the patient with unstable angina
Marco Rossi, MD, Lorenzo Martinelli, MD, Sergio Storti, MD, Michele Corrado, MD, Roberto Marra, MD, Carmelita Varano, MD, Rocco Schiavello, MD The Annals of Thoracic Surgery Volume 68, Issue 6, Pages (December 1999) DOI: /S (99)
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Fig 1 AT III (A) and TAT (B) comparison between the groups at the times of the study. (∗∗Newman-Keuls A–B p < AT III = antithrombin III; TAT = thrombin-antithrombin complex.) The Annals of Thoracic Surgery , DOI: ( /S (99) )
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Fig 2 F 1.2 (A) and d-dimers (B) comparison between the groups at the times of the study. (∗∗Newman-Keuls A–B p < F 1.2 = fragment 1.2 of prothrombin.) The Annals of Thoracic Surgery , DOI: ( /S (99) )
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Fig 3 The scheme shows AT III sites of action in the final pathway of the coagulation system, localizing TAT, F1.2, and d-dimers within the cascade. (AT III = antithrombin III; F 1.2 = fragment 1.2 of prothrombin; TAT = thrombin-antithrombin complex.) The Annals of Thoracic Surgery , DOI: ( /S (99) )
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