Introduction
The American vascular surgeons, Weismann and Tobin in 19581 and Roberts and colleagues in 1964,2 were the first to describe unusual thrombi affecting the lower limb arteries in some
patients treated with heparin for 7 to 14 days. It was not until the mid-1970s however
that Silver and colleagues3,4 identified the key elements of the heparin-induced thrombocytopenia (HIT) syndrome,
namely thrombocytopenia associated with thrombosis beginning several days after starting
heparin. Further, in vitro studies performed by these investigators suggested the
presence of a heparin-dependent, platelet-aggregating factor in serum thought to be
immunoglobulin G (IgG).
In 1992, Amiral and colleagues5 identified the antigen target of HIT antibodies. The unusual nature of the HIT antigen,
a multimolecular complex of heparin and platelet factor 4 (PF4),5,6 together with the remarkable, perhaps unparalleled, platelet- and endothelium-activating
properties of the pathogenic HIT antibodies,7-10 are central to the thrombotic events that occur in these patients. From its obscure
beginnings, HIT is now accepted as a common and distinct immunohematologic syndrome
with broad implications ranging from public health prevention issues to fundamental
questions of pathogenesis, which are leading to new insights into the molecular pathogenesis
of thrombosis.