Abstract
Plasma levels of a fast-acting plasminogen activator inhibitor (PAI), which neutralizes both tissue plasminogen activator (t-PA) and urokinase, are markedly increased in endotoxin-treated rabbits. The ability of this inhibitor to prevent the fibrinolysis that occurs after a thrombogenic stimulus was investigated in a rabbit model. Normal and endotoxin-treated male New Zealand rabbits were infused with ancrod, an enzyme that causes noncrosslinked fibrin formation in vivo. Ancrod stimulated t-PA activity by 90% in normal rabbits and caused hypofibrinogenemia but did not increase PAI levels or induce fibrin deposition in target organs. Rabbits injected with endotoxin (10 micrograms/kg) showed an increase in PAI from less than 1 to 32 U/mL 4 hours later. When ancrod was infused at this time, 90% of the rabbits developed renal fibrin thrombi. Fibrin deposition was recorded in 40% of the rabbits that received a lower dose of endotoxin (1.0 microgram/kg) and had a PAI level of 14 U/ml at the time of ancrod infusion 4 hours later. Fibrin deposition did not occur in the endotoxin-treated rabbits that received normal saline. These data suggest that high levels of PAI inhibit fibrinolysis in vivo, thereby promoting fibrin clot deposition following a thrombogenic stimulus.