Affiliation:
1. Department of Neurology, Iwate Medical University, Morioka City, Japan.
Abstract
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.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Subject
Advanced and Specialized Nursing,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Neurology (clinical)
Cited by
26 articles.
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