What is anti factor IIa?

What is anti factor IIa?

The low molecular weight heparin enoxaparin sodium is used clinically for the prevention and treatment of venous and arterial thrombosis. An anti-factor IIa assay was applied and validated for the potency evaluation of the pharmaceutical formulations.

What is the mechanism of action of heparin?

The mechanism of action of heparin is ATIII-dependent. It acts mainly by accelerating the rate of the neutralization of certain activated coagulation factors by antithrombin, but other mechanisms may also be involved. The antithrombotic effect of heparin is well correlated to the inhibition of factor Xa.

What is Antifactor?

The anti–factor Xa assay is designed to measure plasma heparin (UH and LMWH) levels and to monitor anticoagulant therapy. Heparin is a mixture of negatively charged glycosaminoglycans (sulfated mucopolysaccharides) that have anticoagulant properties due to their interaction with the natural anticoagulant antithrombin.

When should anti-Xa be tested?

Anti-Xa levels should be checked at their peak at 4 hours after dosing (both q12 and q24 variations). Reference ranges are not clinically validated and can vary by facility and indication for use. Suggested “therapeutic range” is usually 0.6-1.0 units/mL.

What does a high anti-Xa level mean?

If the heparin anti-Xa result is high, then the person may be getting an excessive dose and/or not be clearing the drug at an expected rate and may be at an increased risk for excessive bleeding.

What does anti-Xa stand for?

The anti-factor Xa (anti-Xa) assay is a functional assay that facilitates the measurement of antithrombin (AT)-catalyzed inhibition of factor Xa by unfractionated heparin (UFH) and direct inhibition of factor Xa by low-molecular-weight heparin (LMWH) (Kitchen, Br J Haematol 111:397-406, 2000; Walenga et al., Semin …

When should anti-Xa levels be checked?