To monitor heparin and other anticoagulation when undergoing cardiopulmonary bypass, coronary angioplasty, and dialysis
ACT
When you are receiving high dose heparin to prevent clotting during surgical procedures such as a cardiopulmonary bypass; when heparin levels are too high to allow monitoring with a APTT test and/or when a rapid result is necessary to monitor treatment
A blood sample taken from a vein in your arm
None
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How is it used?
The ACT test is used to monitor the effect of high dose heparin before, during, and shortly after surgery requiring intense anticoagulation measures, such as cardiac bypass surgery and cardiac angioplasty. It is requested in situations where the APTT test is not clinically useful (e.g. with very high doses of heparin) or the APTT laboratory result takes too long.
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When is it requested?
The ACT is requested after someone has received an initial dose (bolus) of heparin and before the start of an open heart surgery or other procedure that requires a high level of anticoagulation. During surgery, the ACT is measured at intervals to achieve and maintain a steady level of heparin anticoagulation. After surgery the ACT is monitored until the patient has stabilised and the heparin dosage has been reduced and/or neutralised with a counter agent.
Occasionally, the ACT may be measured during a bleeding episode or used as part of a bedside evaluation of a patient’s heparin anticoagulation level. This is particularly if they have the "lupus anticoagulant", which can interfere with the more usual activated partial thromboplastin (APTT) test.
It may be used in patients receiving direct thrombin inhibitor therapy (e.g. bivalirudin).
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What does the test result mean?
The ACT is measured in seconds: the higher it is the higher the degree of clotting inhibition i.e. the thinner the blood. During surgery, the ACT is maintained above a lower limit, a limit at which most people will not form blood clots. It is important to evaluate how the patient is responding to this ACT lower limit and to the amount of heparin they are receiving. The amount of heparin needed to achieve a certain ACT (for instance, 300 seconds) will vary as will the body’s clotting potential at that ACT. If there are clotting or bleeding problems, the heparin dosage and ACT may be adjusted accordingly. After surgery, the ACT may be maintained within a narrow range (for instance, 175 – 225 seconds) until the patient has stabilised.
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Is there anything else I should know?
ACT and APTT results are not interchangeable. In the area where they overlap (upper measurements of APTT and lower levels of ACT), they have poor correlation. ACT and APTT results should be evaluated independently. It is better to determine a patient’s heparin anticoagulant requirements, stabilise them, and then change the test used for anticoagulation monitoring.
The ACT may be influenced by a person's platelet count and platelet function. Both surgery and heparin can cause thrombocytopenia (low platelet count) resulting in a prolonged ACT. Medicines such as aspirin cause platelet dysfunction resulting in a prolonged ACT. The temperature of the blood may also affect ACT results – the blood tends to cool during surgery as it is mechanically filtered and oxygenated. Acquired and inherited conditions such as coagulation factor deficiencies may also affect ACT results.
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Is ACT ever done in the laboratory?
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Can “lupus anticoagulant” interfere with the ACT test?