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DOI: 10.1055/s-0039-1689397
Diagnostic Information by Haemorrhagometry
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Publication History
Publication Date:
22 May 2019 (online)
A new vivo method to measure bleeding time, bleeding intensity and blood loss from a standardized small skin wound was developed by Sutor, Bowie, and Owen at the Mayo Clinic. At room temperature (24° C) bleeding time is prolonged in patients with quantitative and qualitative platelet deficiencies. Patients with Morbus Willebrand show a prolonged bleeding time and an abnormally high bleeding intensity. Patients with reduced capillary resistency (M. Davis and allergic diathesis) have increased bleeding intensity but normal bleeding time. Aspirin and Dipropyl-Acetate increase the blood loss, prednisone reduces the bleeding intensity. When haemorrhagometry is performed at 17° C (cold tolerance test) bleeding time is pathologically increased in haemophiliacs and in most carriers of haemophilia. If an already closed wound is heated to 43.5° C it starts bleeding again in control subjects, the average heat lysis time is 1.03 min (SD : 0.16 min). In patients with thrombocytic haemorrhagic tendencies the heat lysis time is shortened; a connection between prolonged heat lysis time and hypercoagulaemia has been shown in some cases.