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Hypercoagulability and vascular proinflammatory activation promote cardiac-cerebral fibrinogenesis in a rodent model of Chagas disease

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Figshare2026-02-12 更新2026-04-28 收录
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https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/Hypercoagulability_and_vascular_proinflammatory_activation_promote_cardiac-cerebral_fibrinogenesis_in_a_rodent_model_of_Chagas_Disease/31320936
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Cardiomyopathy and stroke are major complications of Chagas disease (CD). We investigated if hypercoagulability, endothelial cell (EC) dysfunction, and blood stasis cause cardiac-cerebral fibrinogenesis in CD. C57BL/6 mice infected with Trypanosoma cruzi (Tc) were evaluated at acute (AT), indeterminate (IT), and chronic (CT) stages of CD. Mice were given anti-parasite, bicistronic immunogens (BCV or BCVR) to determine the role of Tc in fibrinogenesis. We monitored (1) platelet and coagulation cascade activation; (2) cardiac-cerebral blood vessels injury; (3) proinflammatory/prothrombotic phenotypes of microglia, macrophages, and vascular cells; and (4) fibrinogenesis. After a quiescent acute phase, plasma levels of coagulation and other factors of platelet activation/aggregation, hypercoagulability, and clotting capacity were increased in IT–CT mice. Proinflammatory and prothrombotic cytokines/chemokines in cardiac-cerebral blood vessels were also significantly increased in IT–CT mice. Loss of cardiac EC and a marked increase in their proinflammatory/cell-adhesion response were not compensated for by a pro-angiogenic/wound-healing response in cardiac-cerebral tissues of infected mice. Microglial proinflammatory activation preceded the vascular inflammation suggesting a feedback cycle of EC activation in brain of infected mice. Treatment with BCV/BCVR controlled the parasite persistence and hypercoagulability/vascular inflammation in infected mice. Importantly, BCV/BCVR treatment abolished the fibrin clots that otherwise were pronounced in heart and brain of IT–CD mice. We conclude that acute Tc infection triggered a subdued hemodynamic disorder, and the persistence of low-grade parasites contributed to a cardiovascular/cerebrovascular proinflammatory and prothrombotic response and fibrin deposition in mice. BCV/BCVR offer potential immunotherapies for reducing the recurrent clot formation and risk of stroke in CD.
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2026-02-12
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