Ristocetin-induced platelet aggregation


The ristocetin-induced platelet aggregation is an ex vivo assay for live platelet function. It measures platelet aggregation with the help of von Willebrand factor and exogenous antibiotic ristocetin added in a graded fashion. It is similar to the ristocetin cofactor assay but has the added benefit in that it helps in the diagnosis of type 2B/pseudo von Willebrand disease and Bernard–Soulier syndrome because it uses patient's live endogenous platelets, whereas ristocetin cofactor assay tests the function of only the vWF and not the platelets. Ristocetin cofactor assay uses the patient's platelet poor plasma and adds ristocetin and exogenous formalin-fixed platelets which can passively agglutinate. Formalin does not allow the extrinsic platelets to secrete the vWF of their α-granules, and thus only the activity of the intrinsic vWF is tested.
In an unknown fashion, the antibiotic ristocetin causes von Willebrand factor to bind the platelet receptor glycoprotein Ib, so when ristocetin is added to normal blood, it causes agglutination of fixed platelets or initiates the initial agglutination phase of aggregation of live platelets.
The results of the ristocetin-induced platelet aggregation in some characteristic diseases are the following:
INTERPRETATION OF TEST
RAT+ Ve= normal
RAT_ve=abnormal