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1.
The efficacy of low-dose aspirin in type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) has been questioned. We tested if twice daily dosing of aspirin would be more effective in T2DM, possibly due to increased platelet turnover. A randomised cross-over study compared 75 mg aspirin OD, 75 mg BID and 320 mg OD (≥ 2 week treatment periods) in 25 patients with T2DM and micro- or macrovascular complications. Platelet responses were examined by impedance aggregometry (WBA) and the IMPACT-R aspirin test in whole blood, light transmittance aggregometry in platelet-rich plasma (LTA), and urinary 11-dehydro-thromboxane B2 (TxM). Aspirin 75 mg BID decreased arachidonic acid (AA)-induced WBA compared to 75 mg OD (9.7 ± 4.5 vs. 12.6 ± 3.5 ohm; p = 0.003) or to 320 mg OD (11.5 ± 4.2 Ohms; p = 0.049). WBA responses to collagen were similarly attenuated by BID or high dosing (by 12-14%; p = 0.02 for both). The IMPACT-R showed a better response to 75 mg BID compared to 75 mg OD (p = 0.049), but not to 320 mg OD. AA-induced aggregation by LTA was <6.5% on all occasions, with no differences between aspirin dosages. TxM was reduced after 320 mg OD (p = 0.002), but not 75 mg BID (p = 0.07). Reticulated platelets were highly correlated with mean platelet volume (MPV; r2 = 0.74, p<0.0001). Both markers for platelet turnover were correlated with AA-induced WBA, but neither identified patients who benefited from BID dosing dependably. In conclusion, twice daily dosing improved laboratory responses to aspirin in high risk T2DM patients. Studies of whether BID dosing of aspirin can improve clinical outcomes in such patients are of interest.  相似文献   

2.
We studied the aggregating effect of different concentrations of phospholipase C (PLC) (extracted from Clostridium perfringens) on human platelet-rich plasma (PRP). PRP was preincubated with PLC for 3 min at 37 degrees C and the platelet aggregation was followed for 10 min. The threshold aggregating concentration (TAC) of PLC was 3-4 U/ml. We also studied the potentiation of PLC with other stimuli on platelet aggregation. Potentiating stimuli, such as arachidonic acid (AA), ADP. Platelet Activating Factor (PAF) and U-46619 (a stable analogue of cyclic endoperoxides) were all used at subthreshold concentrations. We also studied the possible inhibitory effect of aspirin, apyrase, TMQ, a prostaglandin endoperoxide/thromboxane receptor antagonist and BN-52021, a PAF receptor antagonist. Only aspirin and apyrase were able to reduce aggregation induced by PLC alone and PLC + AA and PLC + ADP respectively. TMQ and BN-52021 were inactive. In ex vivo experiments oral aspirin (500 mg) partially inhibited platelet aggregation induced by PLC alone, PLC + AA and PLC + ADP 2 and 24 h after administration. Aspirin 20 mg for 7 days also reduced aggregation induced by PLC + AA.  相似文献   

3.
Why single daily dose of aspirin may not prevent platelet aggregation   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The effect of different doses of aspirin on the synergistic activity of sodium arachidonate plus platelet activating factor (paf) ADP or collagen in platelet aggregation was studied in human volunteers. Aggregation studies in platelet rich plasma (PRP) showed that aspirinated platelets, unresponsive to arachidonate, when stirred with threshold concentrations of paf, ADP or collagen, reacted differently according to the dose of aspirin and the time elapsed since ingestion. After a single or daily 50 mg dose for 7-10 days independent of elapsed time until blood withdrawal, a complete synergistic activity was obtained. In PRP samples obtained 24 hours after the last aspirin intake, a complete synergistic aggregation was achieved after a single dose or after 7-10 days of 500 mg aspirin ingestion; synergistic effect did not appear when blood was drawn 2.5 hours after intake. The thromboxane B2 concentrations were very low in all samples after PRP stimulation with sodium arachidonate or paf or both. As rationale is that platelet activation in vivo occurs in response to several stimuli, the therapeutic implications of our results is that aspirin may not prevent the agonist potentiation effect when low dose or daily high dose (500mg) are administrated. This may explain the erratic results of most aspirin trials in which this drug was used to suppress platelet function.  相似文献   

4.
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Aspirin has been shown to reduce the risk of myocardial infarction and stroke. Some investigators believe that low-dose aspirin inhibits platelet aggregation to the same degree as high-dose aspirin. Our study aimed to assess the effect of increasing doses of aspirin on the degree of platelet aggregation induced by collagen and adenosine diphosphate (ADP) among stroke patients. METHODS: Sixteen poststroke patients were prescribed aspirin at daily doses of 40, 80, 160, 325, 650, and 1,300 mg, each dose to be taken for 14 days (total duration 12 weeks). Platelet aggregation studies using 2 microgram/ml collagen and 2 microM ADP were performed on platelet-rich plasma at baseline and on the 14th day of each dose. RESULTS: Platelet aggregation studies using 2 microgram/ml collagen at the start of treatment and at the 14th day of each dose revealed dose-dependent inhibition by aspirin starting at 40 mg/day, but was optimal at 80- 160 mg/day. ADP-induced platelet aggregation inhibition appears to be dose dependent up to 1,300 mg/day. CONCLUSION: Inhibition of collagen-induced platelet aggregation by aspirin appears to be optimal at 80-160 mg/day, while ADP-induced platelet aggregation inhibition by aspirin appears to be dose dependent up to 1,300 mg/day in our poststroke patients, albeit to a less remarkable degree at higher doses.  相似文献   

5.
目的探讨脑梗死患者阿司匹林抵抗与血小板环氧合酶2(cyclooxygenase-2,COX-2)的关系。方法 95例脑梗死患者服用阿司匹林(100mg/d)14d后,用二磷酸腺苷(adenosine phosphate,ADP)和花生四烯酸(arachidonic acid,AA)作诱导剂,测定血小板最大聚集率,并通过测定其尿11-脱氢-血栓素B2(11-dehydrothromboxane B2,11-dh-TXB2)的水平观察体内阿司匹林对血小板功能的抑制程度(11-dh-TXB2≤1500pg/mg判定为阳性),同时用蛋白质印迹技术检测了血小板COX-2的表达水平。结果脑梗死患者阿司匹林抵抗和半抵抗的发生率为27.4%,阿司匹林抵抗组尿11-dh-TXB2水平比敏感组显著升高(P<0.001),而阳性率显著降低(P<0.001),血小板COX-2表达明显增多。结论血小板COX-2可能参与了脑梗死患者阿司匹林抵抗的发生机制。  相似文献   

6.
Antiplatelet effects of combination therapy with aspirin and ticlopidine were investigated in comparison with single aspirin or ticlopidine therapy in 62 patients with cerebral thrombosis or transient ischemic attack. The 14, 21 and 27 patients were given orally daily aspirin 300mg, ticlopidine 200mg and aspirin 81mg with ticlopidine 100mg, respectively. Various platelet function tests were performed before and a week after medication. They included platelet aggregation (PA) to adenosine diphosphate (ADP), arachidonic acid (AA) and platelet activating factor (PAF) with turbidimetry, plasma beta-thromboglobulin (beta TG), platelet factor 4(PF4), thromboxane B2(TXB2) and 6keto-prostaglandin-F1 alpha(6keto PGF1 alpha) with radioimmunoassay, bleeding time with Simplate device, and platelet survival and lysis with Indium-111-tropolone-labelled platelets. Aspirin inhibited PA to ADP and AA but not to PAF, while ticlopidine inhibited PA to ADP and PAF but not to AA. In contrast, aspirin with ticlopidine inhibited PA to all of these agonists despite their smaller doses used. Aspirin reduced plasma TXB2 but not beta TG or PF4, while ticlopidine reduced beta TG and PF4 but not TXB2. On the contrary, aspirin with ticlopidine reduced TXB2 as well as beta TG and PF4. 6keto PGF1 alpha tended to be reduced by aspirin 300mg alone but not by ticlopidine with or without aspirin 81mg. Bleeding time was significantly prolonged by aspirin or ticlopidine alone, although most prolongation was produced by combination of aspirin and ticlopidine. Platelet survival and lysis remained unaltered in 4 patients treated with aspirin or ticlopidine alone, whereas platelet survival was prolonged and platelet lysis was reduced in 4 patients treated with both aspirin and ticlopidine.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

7.
BACKGROUND: Sodium arachidonate was used in this study to determine its capacity to generate thrombin through platelet activation. Whether aspirin prevent this effect was also investigated. METHODS AND RESULTS: Seventeen healthy volunteers without and after 160 mg/day aspirin intake for 3-5 days were studied. Lag-time and TG at basal condition and after platelet stimulation by sodium arachidonate (AA) were measured in normal non-aspirinated as well as "in vivo" aspirinated platelet rich plasma. (PRP). The lag-time was statistically significant shorter in non-aspirinated PRP activated with AA compared with non-activated PRP. This effect was inhibited by aspirin. In non-aspirinated PRP, there was an increase of TG at 4 and 6 min. incubation when platelets were activated with AA but the difference disappeared after 8 min. incubation, (84 +/- 71; 148 +/- 58 and 142 +/- 92 nmol/L respectively) compared with non-aspirinated. non-activated platelets (16 +/- 23; 55 +/- 56 and 111 +/- 76 nmol/L at 4,6 and 8 min, p < 0.0001, p < 0.0001 and p = 0.292, respectively). The AUCo-->22 min were 520.6 +/- 545.5 in non-aspirinated, non-stimulated PRP and 808.9 +/- 617, in non-aspirinated PRP activated with sodium arachidonate (p = 0.014). Aspirin administered in vivo produced a decrease of TG in PRP activated with AA. CONCLUSION: Platelet activated by AA trigged TG. This effect was inhibited by aspirin and could be an additional beneficial effect of aspirin in the prevention of thrombosis.  相似文献   

8.
Aspirin 'resistance' (AR) is a phenomenon of uncertain etiology describing decreased platelet inhibition by aspirin. We studied whether (i) platelets in AR demonstrate increased basal sensitivity to a lower degree of stimulation and (ii) platelet aggregation with submaximal stimulation could predict responses to aspirin. Serum thromboxane B(2) (TxB(2)) levels and platelet aggregation with light transmission aggregometry (LTA) were measured at baseline and 24 hours after 325 mg aspirin administration in 58 healthy subjects. AR was defined as the upper sixth of LTA (> or = 12%) to 1.5 mM AA. Baseline platelet aggregation with submaximal concentrations of agonists [ADP 2 microM, arachidonic acid (AA) 0.75 mM, collagen 0.375 and 0.5 microg/ml] was greater in AR subjects compared with non-AR subjects, but not with higher concentrations (ADP 5 microM and 20 microM, AA 1.5 mM and collagen 1 microg/ml). Post-aspirin platelet aggregation was elevated in AR subjects with both submaximal and maximal stimulation. Baseline and post-aspirin serum TxB(2) were higher in AR subjects and decreased further with ex-vivo COX-1 inhibition, suggesting incompletely suppressed COX-1 activity. Pre-aspirin platelet aggregation to 0.75 AA demonstrated a dichotomous response with 29/58 subjects having aggregation < or = 15% and 29/58 subjects having aggregation > or = 75%. In the high aggregation group 28% had AR compared to 6% in the non-AR group (p = 0.04). In conclusion, platelets in AR subjects demonstrate increased basal sensitivity to submaximal stimulation, which could predict responses to antiplatelet therapy.  相似文献   

9.
Platelet aggregation induced by ADP and collagen was monitored in 25 patients with increased serum levels of triglycerides (7 HLPs type IIb, 14 type IV, 4 type V patients) and compared with a group of 10 normolipidaemic control persons. Platelet aggregation was studied simultaneously in platelet rich plasma (PRP) by both turbidometric and impedance technique and also in whole blood (WB) by the impedance method. Whereas platelet aggregation testing by turbidometry was limited by the optical density of the plasma samples in hypertriglyceridemia, the aggregation process could easily be registered in PRP and WB using the impedance method. Threshold aggregatory concentrations with both agonists were significantly lower for all three groups of HLP.  相似文献   

10.
Aspirin is the most commonly used antiplatelet drug for prevention of ischaemic stroke. In order to determine the prevalence and nature of aspirin failure, we studied 51 adults admitted with suspected ischaemic stroke and already prescribed daily aspirin. Within 48 hours (h) of onset, blood and urine samples were collected to assess platelet aggregation, activation and aspirin response by a range of methods. All tests were then repeated on a second sample taken 24 h after witnessed administration of 75 mg or 150 mg aspirin. At entry to the study, incomplete response to aspirin, measured by arachidonic acid (AA)-stimulated platelet aggregation, was found in 43% of patients. Following in-hospital aspirin administration, there was a significant decrease in AA-aggregation (p=0.001) suggesting poor adherence to therapy prior to admission. However, residual aggregation (10-15%) persisted in 11 subjects - suggesting alternative causes. In incomplete responders on admission, platelet aggregation with adenosine diphosphate (ADP) was significantly higher compared with responders (p<0.05) but there were no significant differences in collagen aggregation, platelet fibrinogen binding or P-selectin expression, plasma von Willebrand factor, fibrinogen, high-sensitivity C-reactive protein, or the urinary metabolite, 11-dehydro-TxB2. Incomplete platelet inhibition is common around the time of acute cerebrovascular ischaemic events in patients prescribed aspirin. Up to 50% of these observations appear due to incomplete adherence to aspirin therapy. Intervention studies are required to determine the clinical relevance of measured platelet response to aspirin in terms of outcome, and the effectiveness of improved pharmacotherapy for stroke prevention.  相似文献   

11.
AIMS: Adenosine diphosphate (ADP) is involved in shear-induced platelet activation, which may be important for platelet responses to stress. We therefore tested the hypothesis that ADP receptor antagonism by clopidogrel treatment would attenuate exercise-induced platelet activation. METHODS AND RESULTS: Fifteen healthy volunteers performed exhaustive exercise without and with clopidogrel pretreatment (75 mg/day; 7 days) in a randomised crossover study. Filtragometry readings (reflecting platelet aggregability in vivo) and 11-dehydro-thromboxane B(2) (TxM) in plasma were determined before and after exercise. Platelet and leukocyte activity, platelet-platelet (PPA), and platelet-leukocyte aggregates (PLAs) in vivo and their responsiveness to agonist stimulation in vitro were assessed by flow cytometry. Clopidogrel treatment inhibited ADP-induced platelet P-selectin expression by 72% (54-85%). Exercise increased platelet aggregation (filtragometry and PPAs), elevated plasma TxM, increased single platelet P-selectin expression, elevated circulating PLAs, and enhanced ADP and thrombin-stimulated P-selectin expression. Clopidogrel prolonged filtragometry readings and attenuated agonist stimulated P-selectin expression at rest, but did not influence TxM in plasma or urine or attenuate platelet or leukocyte responses to exercise. Clopidogrel treatment did not influence plasma CD40L (ligand) at rest or after exercise. CONCLUSION: Clopidogrel treatment attenuates platelet activity in vivo at rest, but exercise counteracts the platelet stabilizing effects of clopidogrel. The hypothesis that ADP is involved in stress-induced platelet activation was not supported.  相似文献   

12.
The effect of sodium arachidonate and paf-acether on the activation of human platelet rich plasma from volunteers 2.30 to 36 hours after 500 mg of aspirin intake was studied. Concentrations of paf-acether which induce a reversible aggregation in platelet rich plasma (PRP) (0.29-0.029 microM) and concentrations of sodium arachidonate (AA) which don't produce aggregation (0.75-1mM) on the PRP from these volunteers, induced full aggregation when added together. But no cooperation activity was achieved in the 2.30 hours sample. Contrarily to the in vitro studies performed in human normal PRP, ASA (200 micrograms/ml) or indomethacin(12 microM) added to the PRP were unable to suppress the cooperative aggregation effect; neither did apyrase (12U/ml), esculetin (10 microM) or nordihydroguaiaretic acid (0.1 microM) have any action on the activated platelets but the synergistic action is completely suppressed by BW 755C (0.1 mM). TXB2 formation is very low in all these activated samples and insufficient to cause platelet aggregation. These results suggest 2 behaviors of platelets: synergistic activity of paf-acether and exogenous AA in vitro on normal human PRP is mediated mainly through active metabolites of AA formed via cyclooxygenase, as was previously published. When cyclooxygenase is inhibited in vivo by administration of 500 mg ASA, the cooperative effect of agonists is still present but the active aggregating product(s) is probably, formed through a pathway different of that of the cyclooxygenase or lypoxygenase.  相似文献   

13.
The effect of a selective thromboxane (TX) synthetase inhibitor (OKY-046), alone and in combination with a very low dose of aspirin, on the platelet function was studied in healthy and diseased subjects. A single dose of 100 mg OKY-046 was orally administered to patients with ischemic cerebrovascular disease (CVD) and healthy volunteers. TXB2 generation and platelet aggregation were measured before and at 1, 4, 6 and 8hr after dosing. In addition, after the administration of a very low dose of aspirin (0.1-0.25 mg/kg/day) for at least one month, a single dose of OKY-046 was given to CVD patients. TXB2 generation and platelet aggregation were measured in the same manner as OKY-046 alone. The effect of OKY-046 on platelet aggregation induced by arachidonic acid (AA) was different in each subject whereas platelet TXB2 generation was almost completely inhibited in all of the patients and healthy volunteers. OKY-046 had a slight inhibitory effect on collagen induced aggregation. A combination of OKY-046 with a very low dose of aspirin, on the other hand, produced additional inhibition of the platelet aggregation induced by both AA and collagen. The present results suggest that the accumulation and metabolism of cyclooxygenase products that accumulate when TX synthetase is blocked, differ in each subject, additional inhibition is caused by the combined use of TX synthetase inhibitor and a very low dose of aspirin because the very low dose of aspirin partially reduces the proaggregatory cyclooxygenase products that accumulate when TX synthetase is blocked.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

14.
The effects of aspirin and dazoxiben were determined on platelet behaviour in platelet-rich plasma (PRP) from 20 volunteers. Dazoxiben prevented aggregation and the release reaction induced by arachidonic acid (AA) in nine of the samples; in the other eleven aggregation and the release reaction still occurred. Aspirin always prevented aggregation and release but higher concentrations were needed in some of the samples of PRP than with others. When the platelets were sensitive to dazoxiben they were relatively sensitive to aspirin; when they were insensitive to dazoxiben they were relatively insensitive to aspirin. The effects of agents that alter production of cAMP on the sensitivity of platelets to aspirin and dazoxiben were determined. Increasing the intracellular level of cAMP rendered platelets more sensitive to the inhibitory effects of both aspirin and dazoxiben; lowering the level of cAMP made the platelets less sensitive to both agents.  相似文献   

15.
We have used the impedance aggregometer to study the "ex vivo" effect of acetylsalicylic acid (ASA) in whole blood (WB) versus platelet-rich plasma (PRP) in 35 male healthy volunteers after 10 days of treatment with 25, 50, 125, 250, and 500 mg/day of ASA. Percent of inhibition of platelet aggregation was determinated at the end of treatment. A greater inhibition of platelet aggregation was observed in WB than in PRP when ASA was administrated at almost all doses. Maximal differences were at 25, 50, and 125 mg/day of ASA on adrenaline, collagen and arachidonic acid induced aggregation, and with 250 and 500 mg/day of ASA when ADP was used as aggregating agent. In the "in vitro" trials, IC-50 values of ASA on ADP and collagen induced aggregation were determined in platelet aggregation by the impedance method in both WB and PRP. ASA shows a lower IC-50 in WB than in PRP. When leucocytes were incubated in PRP samples, it effect was similar to the percent of inhibition in WB.  相似文献   

16.
The effects of low daily oral doses of aspirin (40 mg/day) on platelet aggregability and serum thromboxane B2 concentrations were studied in 19 poststroke patients. Although platelet aggregation was reduced significantly after 1 week, there was wide individual variation in the inhibition of platelet function in spite of marked decreases of serum thromboxane B2 concentrations by greater than 90% (from 224 +/- 58 to 8 +/- 8 ng/ml). There was no correlation between collagen-induced platelet aggregability and serum thromboxane B2 concentration before aspirin administration in the range 100-350 ng/ml, but after 1 week of repeated administration of aspirin, there was a correlation between platelet aggregability and serum thromboxane B2 concentrations of less than 25 ng/ml (r = 0.68, p less than 0.01). However, platelet inhibition was insufficient even in some patients with markedly decreased thromboxane B2 concentrations (less than 5 ng/ml). Our results suggest that individual variation of platelet aggregability in response to low-dose aspirin may be due to variation not only in the degree of inhibition of thromboxane A2 production but also in the relative dependence of platelet aggregation on extra-arachidonic pathways.  相似文献   

17.
The majority of patients who suffer peri-operative thromboembolic complication while undergoing vascular procedures do so despite taking aspirin. This study examined the antiplatelet effect of aspirin during surgery in patients undergoing carotid endarterectomy (CEA). Fifty patients undergoing CEA were standardised to 150 mg aspirin daily for > or =2 weeks. Platelet aggregation in response to arachidonic acid (AA) was measured in platelet rich plasma prepared from blood taken prior to, during, and at the end of surgery. Spontaneous platelet aggregation was also studied, as was the role of physiological agonists (ADP, collagen, thrombin, and epinephrine) in mediating the in vivo and in vitro responses to AA. Eighteen patients undergoing leg angioplasty, also on 150 mg aspirin, without general anaesthesia, served as a control group. In the CEA patients aggregation induced by AA (5 mM) increased significantly from 7.6 +/- 5.5% pre-surgery to 50.8 +/- 29.5% at the end of surgery (p <0.0001). Aggregation to AA was even greater in samples taken mid-surgery from a sub-set of patients (73.8+/-7.2%; p = 0.0001), but fell to 45.9 +/- 7.4% by the end of surgery. The increased aggregation in response to AA was not due to intra-operative release of physiological platelet agonists since addition of agents that block/neutralise the effects of ADP (apyrase; 4 micro g/ml), thrombin (hirudin; 10 units/ml), or epinephrine (yohimbine; 10 micro M/l) to the samples taken at the end of surgery did not block the increased aggregation.The patients undergoing angioplasty also showed a significant rise in the response to AA (5 mM), from 5.6 +/- 5.5% pre-angioplasty to 32.4 +/- 24.9% at the end of the procedure (p <0.0001), which fell significantly to 11.0 +/- 8.1% 4 hours later. The antiplatelet activity of aspirin, mediated by blockade of platelet arachidonic acid metabolism, diminished significantly during surgery, but was partially restored by the end of the procedure without additional aspirin treatment.This rapidly inducible and transient effect may explain why some patients undergoing cardiovascular surgery remain at risk of peri-operative stroke and myocardial infarction.  相似文献   

18.
Aspirin-induced cyclooxygenase (COX)-1 acetylation is irreversible and it is assumed that the platelet thromboxane-A2 aggregation pathway is inhibited for at least 24 hours (h) after aspirin ingestion. However, time course of biological efficacy of daily low-dose aspirin has rarely been assessed in patients with coronary artery disease (CAD). We aimed to assess the 24-h biological efficacy of daily low-dose aspirin in CAD patients. The peak and trough (2 h-24 h) effect of a chronic treatment with once daily dose aspirin were studied in 150 consecutive stable CAD patients. The main outcome measure was light transmission aggregometry (LTA) triggered with 0.5 mg/ml arachidonic acid (AA). In the last 47 consecutive patients, additional tests were conducted at 6, 12, 16, 20 h after last aspirin administration. 4.7% of the patients had significant aggregation (>20% maximal intensity LTA-AA) 2 h after aspirin ingestion and 24.7% at 24 h (p<0.0001). The more precise assessments in the last 47 patients showed that significant platelet aggregation progressively reappeared with time after aspirin intake (2 h--4% of patients, 6 h-- 4%, 12 h--11%, 16 h--16%, 20 h--19% and 24 h--28%). Concordant results were observed using production of thromboxane-B2 and other techniques evaluating AA-induced platelet aggregation/activation. No significant differences were found between lower (75-100 mg/day) and higher (>100 mg/day) dose aspirin. Such aspirin ?resistance? at 24 h after ingestion was related to biological inflammatory markers, current smoking and diabetes. In conclusion, once daily aspirin does not provide stable 24-h antiplatelet protection in a significant proportion of CAD patients. Any biological assessment of aspirin efficacy should take time since last aspirin intake into consideration.  相似文献   

19.
Aspirin (acetylsalicylic acid, ASA), which is recommended for primary and secondary prevention in diabetes mellitus (DM), has been shown to have a lower antiplatelet activity in diabetic patients. We conducted a crossover designed observational study to evaluate whether there is an association between the parameters relevant to metabolic control of diabetes and platelet sensitivity to aspirin in type 2 diabetic patients. Platelets' ability to adhere and aggregate was monitored with the use of platelet function analyser (PFA-100 collagen/epinephrine closure time, CT(CEPI) or collagen/ADP closure time, CT(CADP)), classical turbidimetric aggregometry and whole blood electrical aggregometry (WBEA), using collagen (WBEA(coll)), ADP (WBEA(ADP)) and arachidonic acid (WBEA(AA)) as platelet agonists, in 48 control healthy volunteers (mean age+/-S.D., 49+/-9 years) and 31 type 2 DM patients (50+/-9 years; HbA(1c) 9.4+/-1.6%). In majority of control subjects (69%) and minority of diabetic patients (29%, p=0.0006), the use of 150 mg aspirin daily for 1 week significantly reduced platelet adhesiveness and reactivity (by 14.1% in diabetes vs. 78.6% in control, p(np)=0.0035, as expressed by the relative changes in CT(CEPI)). Aspirin reduced WBEA(coll) and WBEA(AA) to a lesser extent in diabetic patients (by 2.1% vs. 8.3% in controls, p(np)=0.0397, and by 97.3+/-12.8% vs. 100% in controls, p(np)=0.0383, respectively), which corresponded to ASA-mediated decreased aggregation in platelet-rich plasma (PRP, r(S)=0.45 and r(S)=0.78 for collagen- or arachidonate-agonized platelets, p<0.01 or lower). The maximal inhibition of platelet aggregation was lower and IC(50) higher in diabetic compared to control subjects, both in the presence of arachidonic acid (71% vs. 39%, p(np)0.0001; 0.5 microg/ml vs. 1.3 microg/ml, p<0.0001) and collagen (52% vs. 35%, p<0.0004; 1.6 microg/ml vs. 2.1 microg/ml, p<0.01). The reduced response of platelets from diabetic subjects to aspirin was associated with a higher level of HbA(1c), lower concentration of HDL-cholesterol and a higher total cholesterol concentration. Overall, there is evidence that reduced platelets response to aspirin may occur more often in diabetic patients. Poor metabolic control may play a role in the reduced platelet sensitivity to aspirin in DM patients. Thus, our findings strongly support the requirements for an excellent near-normal metabolic control and may suggest a need for alternative ASA dosing schedules in DM patients.  相似文献   

20.
We have studied the onset and recovery of inhibition of platelet function by low dose aspirin. Enteric-coated aspirin 50mg daily was administered to five human volunteers for five weeks and then 100mg daily was given for a further five weeks. We studied platelet aggregation and thromboxane formation in response to a range of stimuli: ADP, adrenaline, arachidonate and collagen, and also measured thromboxane formation after coagulation of whole blood (serum thromboxane). The onset of inhibition of platelet aggregation was progressive over several days for each of the four platelet stimuli, and was synchronous with the inhibition of thromboxane formation. Maximum inhibition occurred by day three for the weak stimuli ADP and adrenaline, by day five for the stronger stimuli arachidonate and collagen, but did not occur until day eight for serum thromboxane. Further inhibitory effects on both aggregation and thromboxane generation were observed after 100mg daily. Two weeks after the cessation of aspirin the responses to collagen and arachidonate and serum thromboxane had returned to normal. Platelet aggregation in response to the weaker stimuli, ADP and adrenaline, still showed detectable inhibition two weeks after cessation of aspirin, but had returned to normal by four weeks. These experiments provided no evidence for an effect of aspirin on platelets separate to its effect on cyclooxygenase. The onset and recovery of inhibition of platelet function by low dose aspirin was dependent on the strength of the stimulus studied.  相似文献   

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