
In the 1970s a BHF Professor, Michael Davies, conclusively proved that blood clots in the heart’s coronary arteries can cause heart attacks by starving the heart of blood.
We now know that blood clots can also cause strokes by cutting off the blood supply to part of the brain, causing brain cells to become damaged or die.
The next step for scientists around the world was to take a look at why and how blood clots happen, and to start developing clot-busting medicines.
Over the next 20 years thanks in part to major BHF-funded studies the clot-busters aspirin and streptokinase, taken as soon as possible after a heart attack or stroke, were proven to reduce deaths. This was very exciting for the medical community, and vast changes in doctors’ prescribing patterns were seen (68 per cent of doctors shifted to routine administration of the drugs after a person had a heart attack).
However these drugs don’t always work effectively, and both can cause an increase in bleeding after injury.
There is still plenty of research to be done into understanding the exact process of clot formation.
Aspirin works by blocking platelet activation. BHF Professor Steve Watson and his team study in detail how platelets are stimulated to form a clot, in the hope of finding new drugs that can prevent clotting but with reduced risk of bleeding.
Streptokinase works by dissolving the proteins in the clot. Dr Helen Philippou in Leeds has BHF funding to discover new drugs that prevent the proteins from clotting and which again will reduce the risk of bleeding.
In a different approach, researchers at Washington University School
of Medicine have worked to produce new drugs that remove the molecules
causing platelet activation. Last year they found
that a genetically-engineered protein called APT102 is effective at
preventing blood clots from reforming in dogs after a heart attack, and
reduces the risk of bleeding.

Fraser Macrae from the University of Leeds carries out research to better understand how clots are formed in the body.
Working out the clot structure may be of benefit in the prevention and treatment of heart and circulatory disease.His image (shown above) won our annual science image competition ‘Reflections of Research’ in 2014. This picture could easily be mistaken for an underwater coral reef but is, in fact, a detailed microscope image of a blood clot – the leading cause of heart attacks and stroke. The thick grey mesh is the clot, capturing a mixture of different cells seen in different colours.
Fraser Macrae
University of Leeds