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Assessment of the antiplatelet effects of low to medium dose aspirin in the early and late phases after ischaemic stroke and TIA.

McCabe DJ, Harrison P, Mackie IJ, Sidhu PS, Lawrie AS, Purdy G, Machin SJ, Brown MM

The Haemostasis Research Unit, Department of Haematology.

Vascular events commonly recur in stroke patients on aspirin, and may reflect incomplete inhibition of platelet function with aspirin therapy. The platelet function analyser (PFA-100) activates platelets by aspirating a blood sample at a moderately high shear rate through a capillary to a biologically active membrane with a central aperture. The membrane is coated with collagen, and either ADP (C-ADP) or epinephrine (C-EPI). The time taken for activated platelets to adhere, aggregate, and occlude the aperture is called the closure time. Previous studies have shown that aspirin prolongs the C-EPI closure time, without prolongation of the C-ADP closure time, in the majority of control subjects. We hypothesised that the PFA-100 would provide a sensitive assay for the detection of early and convalescent phase cerebrovascular disease (CVD) patients who had incomplete inhibition of platelet function with aspirin. We investigated potential cyclooxygenase-dependent and -independent mechanisms that might influence the responsiveness to aspirin using the PFA-100. Patients were studied during the early (< or = 4 weeks, n=57) and convalescent phases ((< or = 3 months, n=46) after ischaemic stroke or TIA. To investigate potential mechanisms that could contribute to aspirin responsiveness on the PFA-100, we measured von Willebrand factor antigen levels, and carried out platelet aggregometry experiments in platelet-rich plasma in response to sodium arachidonate (1 mM) and ADP (5 microM). Sixty percent of patients in the early phase and 43% of patients in the convalescent phase did not have prolonged C-EPI closure times on 75-300 mg of aspirin daily, and were defined as aspirin non-responders. Median C-ADP closure times were significantly shorter in aspirin non-responders than aspirin-responders in both the early and convalescent phases after symptom onset (P=0.008), suggesting platelet hyper-reactivity to collagen or ADP in the aspirin non-responder subgroup. There was a significant inverse relationship between plasma von Willebrand factor antigen levels and C-EPI closure times in both early and convalescent phase CVD patients (P=0.008). Mean von Willebrand factor antigen levels were significantly higher in aspirin non-responders than aspirin responsive patients in the early (P=0.001), but not convalescent phase (P=0.2) after stroke and TIA. None of the patients studied were defined as being aspirin-resistant using sodium arachidonate- or ADP-induced platelet aggregometry. A large proportion of ischaemic CVD patients have incomplete inhibition of platelet function with low to medium dose aspirin using the PFA-100. The results suggest that cyclooxygenase-independent mechanisms, including elevated von Willebrand factor antigen levels, play an important role in mediating aspirin non-responsiveness on the PFA-100.

Published 13 July 2005 in Platelets, 16(5): 269-80.
Full-text of this article is available online (may require subscription).

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Stroke Research Today Archive:

Volume 1 (2004)
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