• Eur J Anaesthesiol · Sep 2014

    Comparative Study

    The influence of drugs used in cardiac anaesthesia and critical care on multiple electrode aggregometry: An in-vitro volunteer study.

    • Annouk Perret Morisoli, Fabrizio Gronchi, Enrico Ferrari, Catherine Blanc, Philippe Frascarolo, Anne Angelillo-Scherrer, and Carlo Marcucci.
    • From the Department of Anaesthesiology (APM, FG, CB, PF, CM), the Department of Cardiac Surgery (EF), and the Service and Central Laboratory of Haematology (AAS), Lausanne University Hospital, Lausanne, Switzerland.
    • Eur J Anaesthesiol. 2014 Sep 1;31(9):499-504.

    BackgroundMultiple electrode aggregometry (MEA) is a point-of-care test evaluating platelet function and the efficacy of platelet inhibitors. In MEA, electrical impedance of whole blood is measured after addition of a platelet activator. Reduced impedance implies platelet dysfunction or the presence of platelet inhibitors. MEA plays an increasingly important role in the management of perioperative platelet dysfunction. In vitro, midazolam, propofol, lidocaine and magnesium have known antiplatelet effects and these may interfere with MEA interpretation.ObjectiveTo evaluate the extent to which MEA is modified in the presence of these drugs.DesignAn in-vitro study using blood collected from healthy volunteers.SettingCentre Hospitalier Universitaire Vaudois, Lausanne, Switzerland, 2010 to 2011.PatientsTwenty healthy volunteers.InterventionMeasurement of baseline MEA was using four activators: arachidonic acid, ADP, TRAP-6 and collagen. The study drugs were then added in three increasing, clinically relevant concentrations.Main Outcome MeasureMEA was compared with baseline for each study drug.ResultsMidazolam, propofol and lidocaine showed no effect on MEA at any concentration. Magnesium at 2.5 mmol l had a significant effect on the ADP and TRAP tests (31 ± 13 and 96 ± 39 AU, versus 73 ± 21 and 133 ± 28 AU at baseline, respectively), and a less pronounced effect at 1 mmol l on the ADP test (39 ± 0 AU).ConclusionMidazolam, propofol and lidocaine do not interfere with MEA measurement. In patients treated with high to normal doses of magnesium, MEA results for ADP and TRAP-tests should be interpreted with caution.Trial RegistrationClinicaltrials.gov (no. NCT01454427).

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