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Aspirin-induced platelet inhibition in patients undergoing cardiac surgery
Authors:Norbert Zimmermann  Muhammed Kurt  Joachim Winter  Emmeran Gams  Folker Wenzel  Artur Aron Weber
Affiliation:1. Federal Institute for Drugs and Medical Devices, D-53175, Bonn, Germanynzimmermann@bfarm.de;3. Department of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, Heinrich Heine–University, D-40225, Düsseldorf, Germany;4. Department of Hemostasis and Transfusion Medicine, Heinrich Heine–University, D-40225, Düsseldorf, Germany;5. Department of Pharmacology and Clinical Pharmacology, Heinrich Heine–University, D-40225, Düsseldorf, Germany
Abstract:Platelet function and response to pharmacological inhibition are altered by cardiac surgery. For example, aggregation is increased early after aortic valve replacement (AVR) and platelet response to aspirin is often insufficient after coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG). We hypothesized that the effect of aspirin administration after cardiac surgery might be impaired due to platelet activation. Therefore, the antiplatelet effect of aspirin was compared in patients (n?=?20 per group) after CABG and AVR surgery (bileaflet prosthesis). Arachidonic acid-induced aggregation (turbidimetry) and thromboxane formation (radioimmunoassay) were determined before and 1, 5, and 10 days after surgery. In CABG-patients, antiplatelet treatment had been discontinued 10 days before surgery. Oral aspirin was started on day 1 after CABG. AVR-patients did not receive oral aspirin. Before surgery, platelet aggregation and thromboxane formation were significantly higher in patients with aortic stenosis. After CABG, thromboxane formation was not significantly changed from control values before surgery (66?±?13% on day 10) despite oral aspirin treatment, whereas thromboxane formation in patients undergoing AVR significantly increased compared to values before surgery (216?±?29% on day 10). In both groups of patients, 100?µmol/l aspirin in vitro largely inhibited platelet function before surgery, with markedly attenuated effects after surgery. In conclusion, thromboxane formation increased after AVR but not after CABG. The antiplatelet effect of aspirin, therefore, may be impaired after CABG by increased platelet activity. An additional in vitro “resistance” of platelets was seen after both CABG and AVR.
Keywords:Cardiac surgery  cardiopulmonary bypass  aspirin
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