Variable Platelet Response to Low-dose ASA and the Risk of Limb Deterioration in Patients Submitted to Peripheral Arterial Angioplasty

Author:

Mueller Michael Rolf1,Salat Andreas2,Stangl Petra2,Murabito Marco3,Pulaki Sad3,Boehm Dagmar4,Koppensteiner Renate5,Ergun Erdem6,Mittlboeck Martina7,Schreiner Wolfgang7,Losert Udo3,Wolner Ernst1

Affiliation:

1. The University of Vienna, Department of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery, Vienna, Austria

2. The University of Vienna, Department of General Surgery, Vienna, Austria

3. The University of Vienna, Department of Center f. Biomedical Research and LBI f. Cardio-Surgical Research, Vienna, Austria

4. The University of Vienna, Department of Clinic of Anesthesiology and General Intensive Care Medicine, Vienna, Austria

5. The University of Vienna, Department of Angiology, Vienna, Austria

6. The University of Vienna, Department of Clinic of Ophtalmology, Vienna, Austria

7. The University of Vienna, Institute of Medical Computer Science, Vienna, Austria

Abstract

SummaryA group of 100 patients with intermittent claudication (70 male, 30 female), treated with 100 mg ASA per day, were followed over 18 months after elective percutaneous balloon angioplasty. Platelet function was monitored over a period of 12 months by corrected whole blood aggregometry (CWBA). Upon stimulation by arachidonic acid (AA), adenosine diphosphate (ADP) and collagen, CWBA-results were obtained by an electronic acquisition and evaluation system correcting for hematocrit and platelet count of the blood sample.All patients showed a completely inhibited platelet response to AA stimulation. Comparison of the CWB A-results with clinical parameters revealed that reocclusions at the site of angioplasty occurred exclusively in male patients for which CWBA failed to prove an inhibition of aggregation upon both agonists, ADP and collagen, and for these patients the risk of complication is at least 87% higher (p = 0.0093).Only 40% of male patients show the expected effect of ASA on in vitro platelet aggregation at any given point in time and CWBA is capable of predicting those male patients which are at an elevated risk of reocclusion following peripheral angioplasty.

Publisher

Georg Thieme Verlag KG

Subject

Hematology

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