Pharmacological intervention against bubble-induced platelet aggregation in a rat model of decompression sickness

Author:

Pontier Jean-Michel123,Vallée Nicolas2,Ignatescu Mihaela4,Bourdon Lionel2

Affiliation:

1. Département Médical, Ecole de Plongée de la Marine, Toulon;

2. Département de Recherche Subaquatique, IRBA-IMNSSA, ERRSO, Toulon;

3. UMR MD 2 Physiologie et Physiopathologie en Condition d'Oxygénation Extrême, IMNSSA et Faculté de Médecine IFR Jean Roche, France; and

4. London Hyperbaric and Wound Healing Centre, Whipps Cross Unversity Hospital, London, United Kingdom

Abstract

Decompression sickness (DCS) with alterations in coagulation system and formation of platelet thrombi occurs when a subject is subjected to a reduction in environmental pressure. Blood platelet consumption after decompression is clearly linked to bubble formation in humans and offers an index for evaluating DCS severity in animal models. Previous studies highlighted a predominant involvement of platelet activation and thrombin generation in bubble-induced platelet aggregation (BIPA). To study the mechanism of the BIPA in DCS, we examined the effect of acetylsalicylic acid (ASA), heparin (Hep), and clopidogrel (Clo), with anti-thrombotic dose pretreatment in a rat model of DCS. Male Sprague-Dawley rats ( n = 208) were randomly assigned to one experimental group treated before the hyperbaric exposure and decompression protocol either with ASA (3×100 mg·kg−1·day−1, n = 30), Clo (50 mg·kg−1·day−1, n = 60), Hep (500 IU/kg, n = 30), or to untreated group ( n = 49). Rats were first compressed to 1,000 kPa (90 msw) for 45 min and then decompressed to surface in 38 min. In a control experiment, rats were treated with ASA ( n = 13), Clo ( n = 13), or Hep ( n = 13) and maintained at atmospheric pressure for an equivalent period of time. Onset of DCS symptoms and death were recorded during a 60-min observation period after surfacing. DCS evaluation included pulmonary and neurological signs. Blood samples for platelet count (PC) were taken 30 min before hyperbaric exposure and 30 min after surfacing. Clo reduces the DCS mortality risk (mortality rate: 3/60 with Clo, 15/30 with ASA, 21/30 with Hep, and 35/49 in the untreated group) and DCS severity (neurological DCS incidence: 9/60 with Clo, 6/30 with ASA, 5/30 with Hep, and 12/49 in the untreated group). Clo reduced fall in platelet count and BIPA (−4,5% with Clo, −19.5% with ASA, −19,9% with Hep, and −29,6% in the untreated group). ASA, which inhibits the thromboxane A2 pathway, and Hep, which inhibits thrombin generation, have no protective effect on DCS incidence. Clo, a specific ADP-receptor antagonist, reduces post-decompression platelet consumption. These results point to the predominant involvement of the ADP release in BIPA but cannot differentiate definitively between bubble-induced vessel wall injury and bubble-blood component interactions in DCS.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology (medical),Physiology

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