Platelet activation plays an important role in thrombosis. Platelet glycoprotein Ⅱ b/Ⅲ a ( GPⅡ b/Ⅲ a ) is the receptor of fibrinogen. Platelet cross-linking with fibrinogen through GP Ⅱ b/Ⅲ a is the process of...Platelet activation plays an important role in thrombosis. Platelet glycoprotein Ⅱ b/Ⅲ a ( GPⅡ b/Ⅲ a ) is the receptor of fibrinogen. Platelet cross-linking with fibrinogen through GP Ⅱ b/Ⅲ a is the process of thrombosis. Ca^2+ is an important intracellular second messenger in platelet activation. It has been reported that GP Ⅱ b/Ⅲ a receptors were involved in the calcium influx of activated platelet, and GP Ⅱ b/Ⅲ a receptor had characteristics of calcium channel or an adjacent calcium channel.展开更多
Fetal liver tissues obtained from 28 human fetuses with gestation age from 3 to 6 months and fetal bone marrow from 35 human fetuses from 3 to 7 months were observed by immunochemical staining with anti-platelet GPⅡ ...Fetal liver tissues obtained from 28 human fetuses with gestation age from 3 to 6 months and fetal bone marrow from 35 human fetuses from 3 to 7 months were observed by immunochemical staining with anti-platelet GPⅡ b / Ⅲa monoclonal antibody and ABC technique. In the fetal liver, megakaryocytes were wholly located among growing fetal liver cells and near foci of hemopoiesis. Some megakaryocytes in the fetal liver were small7890- lymphoid-like megakaryocytes. The size of megakaryocytes both in the fetal liver (14.79 ± 4.52μm) and in the fetal bone marrow (16.08±7.39 μm) was small, which did not vary significantly over the gestation age ranging from 3 to 6 or 7 months. However, the maturation stage of megakaryocytes in the fetal liver shifted to more mature stage with the advancement of gestation, although the maturation stage of megakaryocytes in the fetal bone marrow did not change with the advancement of gestation from 4 to 7 months, the megakaryocyte in the fetal bone marrow was less mature展开更多
Thrombosis formation on disrupted atherosclerotic plaque is the most common acuse of cardiovascular diseases, in the pathophysiology, increased platelet reactivity is a descriptor of the risk of cardiovascular events ...Thrombosis formation on disrupted atherosclerotic plaque is the most common acuse of cardiovascular diseases, in the pathophysiology, increased platelet reactivity is a descriptor of the risk of cardiovascular events in healthy persons and in patients with overt coronary artery disease. Regardless of the stimulus for activation platelet-platelet interation and thrombus formation is ultimately regulated through the GP Ⅱ b/Ⅲ a receptor展开更多
文摘Platelet activation plays an important role in thrombosis. Platelet glycoprotein Ⅱ b/Ⅲ a ( GPⅡ b/Ⅲ a ) is the receptor of fibrinogen. Platelet cross-linking with fibrinogen through GP Ⅱ b/Ⅲ a is the process of thrombosis. Ca^2+ is an important intracellular second messenger in platelet activation. It has been reported that GP Ⅱ b/Ⅲ a receptors were involved in the calcium influx of activated platelet, and GP Ⅱ b/Ⅲ a receptor had characteristics of calcium channel or an adjacent calcium channel.
文摘Fetal liver tissues obtained from 28 human fetuses with gestation age from 3 to 6 months and fetal bone marrow from 35 human fetuses from 3 to 7 months were observed by immunochemical staining with anti-platelet GPⅡ b / Ⅲa monoclonal antibody and ABC technique. In the fetal liver, megakaryocytes were wholly located among growing fetal liver cells and near foci of hemopoiesis. Some megakaryocytes in the fetal liver were small7890- lymphoid-like megakaryocytes. The size of megakaryocytes both in the fetal liver (14.79 ± 4.52μm) and in the fetal bone marrow (16.08±7.39 μm) was small, which did not vary significantly over the gestation age ranging from 3 to 6 or 7 months. However, the maturation stage of megakaryocytes in the fetal liver shifted to more mature stage with the advancement of gestation, although the maturation stage of megakaryocytes in the fetal bone marrow did not change with the advancement of gestation from 4 to 7 months, the megakaryocyte in the fetal bone marrow was less mature
文摘Thrombosis formation on disrupted atherosclerotic plaque is the most common acuse of cardiovascular diseases, in the pathophysiology, increased platelet reactivity is a descriptor of the risk of cardiovascular events in healthy persons and in patients with overt coronary artery disease. Regardless of the stimulus for activation platelet-platelet interation and thrombus formation is ultimately regulated through the GP Ⅱ b/Ⅲ a receptor