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Published 2008 | public
Journal Article

Using microfluidics to understand the effect of spatial distribution of tissue factor on blood coagulation

Abstract

Initiation of blood coagulation by tissue factor (TF) is a robust, highly regulated process. Both the spatial distribution of TF and the geometry of the vasculature may play important roles in regulating coagulation. As this review describes, microfluidic systems provide a unique opportunity for investigating the spatiotemporal dynamics of blood coagulation in vitro. Microfluidic systems with surfaces of phospholipid bilayers patterned with TF have been used to demonstrate experimentally the threshold responses of initiation of coagulation to the size and shape of surfaces presenting TF. These systems have also been used to demonstrate experimentally that propagation of coagulation is regulated by the shear rate of blood flow in microcapillaries and microchannels. By understanding these and other aspects of the spatial dynamics that regulate blood coagulation, many new methods for treating clotting disorders, such as venous thromboembolism (VTE) and sepsis, could arise.

Additional Information

Copyright © 2008 Elsevier Ltd. Papers of the 4th Symposium on Hemostasis with Special Focus on Factor VIIa and Tissue Factor-Understanding the Molecular Mechanism. This work was supported in part by NSF CAREER Award CHE-0349034, ONR Grant N00014-03-10482, and by the Dreyfus Teacher-Scholar Award. R.F.I. is a Cottrell Scholar of Research Corporation, and an A.P. Sloan Research Fellow. Some of this work was performed at the MRSEC microfluidic facility funded by the NSF. We thank Jessica M. Price for assistance in writing and editing this manuscript.

Additional details

Created:
August 22, 2023
Modified:
October 18, 2023