Thrombosis research
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Thrombosis research · Mar 2002
Clinical TrialReductions in platelet contractile force correlate with duration of cardiopulmonary bypass and blood loss in patients undergoing cardiac surgery.
Blood loss secondary to platelet dysfunction is known to be increased when the duration of cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) is prolonged. The ability to correlate alterations in platelet function with the duration of bypass and early postoperative blood loss, however, has remained elusive. Platelet contractile force, a novel measure of platelet-mediated clot retraction, is known to be reduced following cardiac surgery and blockade of platelet adhesion receptors. ⋯ Reductions in platelet contractile force had a significant correlation with duration of CPB (r=0.564; P=0.002) and early blood loss (r=0.545; P=0.003). Although decreases in platelet contractile force and aggregation both correlated with CPB time in the smaller subset of patients tested, only platelet contractile force correlated with decreases in CD42b, CD61 and blood loss. The results of this study suggest that prolongation of CPB is related to increasing degrees of platelet dysfunction and that reductions in platelet contractile force are related to decreases in platelet adhesion receptors and early postoperative blood loss.
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Thrombosis research · Mar 2002
Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical TrialHigh-dose aspirin in addition to daily low-dose aspirin decreases platelet activation in patients before and after percutaneous coronary intervention.
Activated platelets play a major role in acute vessel closure after coronary angioplasty. Although aspirin is the routine therapy during angioplasty, it only incompletely prevents acute closure. This might be due to suboptimal dosing. ⋯ The addition of high-dose aspirin to daily low-dose aspirin, 1 day before coronary angioplasty, significantly reduced the platelet activation state before and after intervention. The PFA-100 analyzer did not detect differences in the effect of low- versus high-dose aspirin on platelet function.