Heparin Monitoring Products – Chromogenix Heparin Anti-FIIa Research Method

Determination of heparin in plasma with S-2238

Measurement Principle

Heparin is analyzed as a complex with antithrombin (AT) present in the sample. The concentration of this complex is dependent on the availability of AT. In order to obtain a more constant concentration of AT, purified AT is added to the test plasma. Thrombin in excess is neutralized in proportion to the amount of heparin, which determines the amount of heparin-AT complex. The remaining amount of thrombin hydrolyses the chromogenic substrate H-D-Phe-Pip-Arg-pNA (S-2238) thus liberating the chromophoric group, pNA. the color is then read photometrically at 405 nm.

Heparin + AT—>[Heparin · AT]
[Heparin · AT] + Thrombin (excess)—>[Heparin · AT · Thrombin] + Thrombin (residual)
Thrombin (residual)
H-D-Phe-Pip-Arg-pNA + H20—>H-D-Phe-Pip-Arg-OH + pNA

Reagents

  1. S-2238, 25 mg (Art. No. S820324)
  2. Thrombin (Art. No. B820712)
    Human thrombin or bovine thrombin can be used in 0.15 mol/l NaCl solution.
    The activity of the solution should be 14 nkat/ml (about 6 NIH-U/ml).
    If bovine thrombin 53 nkat from Chromogenix is used, dissolve the content of one vial with 3.8 ml saline.
  3. Antithrombin 10 IU (Art. No. B820720)
    Reconstitute with 5 ml water to obtain a concentration of 2 IU/ml
  4. Tris Buffer, pH 8.4 (25°C)
Tris6.1 g(50 mmol/l)
NaCl10.2 g(175 mmol/l)
Na2 EDTA2.8 g(7.5 mmol/l)
Distilled water800 ml

Adjust the pH to 8.4 at 25°C by adding an approproriate amount (approx. 22 ml) of 1 mol/l HCL. Fill up to 1 liter.

5. Normal Plasma
Blood should be taken from normal donors. 10-30 ml of citrated blood (9 vol blood and 1 vol 0.1 mol/l sodium citrate) are taken from each donor. the first ml of blood is discarded and the tube is kept in an ice bath. Plasma is prepared by centrigugation at 2000 x g for 20 minutes at 4°C. Equal amounts of plasma from the donors are mixed and dispensed in small volumes. The normal plasma is stable for 3 months at -20°C or below. Thaw at 37°C and then keep on ice.

6. Acetic acid 20%
Acetic acid is used in the acid-stopped method.

Specimen collection

Blood (9 vol) is mixed with sodium citrate (1 vol) cooled to 0°C with ice and centrifuged at 2000 x g for 20 min at 4°C.

Dilute plasma 1:5 with Tris Buffer pH 8.4.

Standard curve

The same heparin as is used for the patient is diluted to 1 IU/ml with saline 0.9%. Then 100 µl dilution is further diluted with 1.9 ml buffer to obtain a concentration of 0.05 IU/ml.

Standard IU/mlBuffer µlAT µlPlasma dil 1:5 µlHeparin 0.05 IU/ml µl
0.008001001000
0.25700100100100
0.50600100100200
0.75500100100300
0.10400100100400

Method

Initial rate methodTube No. 1
Buffer800 µl
AT100 µl
Test plasma100 µl
Mix
Tube No. 2
Standard or tube No. 1200 µl
Incubate at 37C3-4 min
Thrombin100 µl
Incubate at 37C30 sec
Substrate (37C)200 µl
Incubate at 37C600 sec
Acetic acid 20%300 µl
Blanks for acid stopped methodNormal plasma blankTest plasma blank
Standard 0 IU/ml200 µl
Sample from tube No. 1200 µl
Acetic acid300 µl300 µl
Mix
Distilled water300 µl300 µl
Mix

Note: As a rule a normal plasma blank or even water is used as a blank. If bilirubin exceeds 100 µml/l or the test plasma is opaque, read the test plasma sample against its own blank.

Calculation

Plot A or ΔA/min for the standards against their known heparin concentration.
Heparin concentration is determined by plotting the A or ΔA/min for the test sample on the standard curve and read the corresponding heparin value.

Bibliography

  1. Bhargava AS et al. Characterization of a new potent heparin. 2nd communication: chemical analysis of the carbohydrate content and determination of the biological activity of a new potent heparin preparation in vitro, using protamine neutralization and amidolytic methods for factor Xa and thrombin. Arzneimittelforschung 30, 1071-1074 (1980).
  2. Sache E et al. Studies on a highly active anticoagulant fraction of high molecular weight isolated from porcine sodium heparin. Thromb Res 25, 443-458 (1982).
  3. Van Putten J et al. Determination of low molecular weight heparin in clinical laboratory. Haemostasis 14, 205-210 (1984).
  4. Van Putten J et al. Automated spectrophotometric heparin assays. Comparison of methods. Haemostasis 14, 195-204 (1984).
  5. Berry CN et al. Effects of the synthetic thrombin inhibitor argatroban on fibrin- or clot-incorporated thrombin: comparison with heparin and recombinant hirudin. Thromb Haemost 72, 381-386 (1994).
  6. Byun Y et al. Effect of fibronectin on the binding of antithrombin III to immobilized heparin. J Biomed Mater Res 30, 95-100 (1996).