Platelet function abnormalities in response to arachidonic acid in the acute phase of myocardial infarction.
Nyckelord
Abstrakt
The aggregation of platelets to arachidonic acid was studied serially in patients admitted to the hospital with suspected acute myocardial infarction (MI) and no history of platelet-altering drug ingestion. Of 17 patients studied within the first 48 hours after MI, 16 had a marked decrease in aggregation, to 0.5 mM arachidonic acid (15 +/- 12% compared with 64 +/- 15% for control subjects, p less than 0.01). The exception was a patient with documented coronary artery spasm who was receiving nifedipine at the time of MI. He had a delayed but normal final percent aggregation. The aggregation response returned to normal at 2 to 4 days and was slightly above normal at 6 to 10 days (change not statistically significant). Thromboxane B2 formation correlated with the response of patients' platelets to arachidonic acid (38 +/- 15 ng in the low responders versus 161 +/- 30 ng/3 X 10(8) platelets/4 min in the normal responders, p less than 0.05). Low responding platelets after washing had normal adenosine diphosphate and adenosine triphosphate contents and aggregated and formed thromboxane B2 normally with arachidonic acid. The plasma of patients with MI was found to inhibit platelet aggregation and thromboxane B2 formation to arachidonic acid.