Hemocompatibility test of medical materials aims to detect adverse interaction between artificial surface and blood, which
can activate or destruct blood components. In arterial flow conditions, due to a high shear stress, platelet is the cell critical for the
hemocompatibility compliance. A classical instrumentation for the dynamic test of hemocompatibility involves a flow chamber with a contact
surface between blood stream and tested plate. In the current study we investigated a simplified model of the whole blood shear stress, based
on a cone and plate rotational viscometer. Several indices of platelet activation were analyzed, including platelet and granulocyteplatelet
aggregates, platelet activation markers and plateletderived microparticles. This model allowed to estimate platelet destruction, however no
adhesion could be measured directly. In following tests of several polymer and metallic layer coated materials, the test revealed comparable
performance to more laborious hemocompatibility experiments. We suggest, that thrombogenic potential of plateletderived microparticles,
which can be accurately measured in blood plasma, offers very useful estimate of hemocompatibility. Moreover, this parameter has already
been validated in clinics and could be used for monitoring of implanted cardiovascular materials.
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