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Homocysteine levels and platelet aggregation in patients with cerebral circulatory disorders

Authors :
Z Sabaliauskiene
P Gribauskas
V Gaigalaite
J Ptašekas
V Ojeraitene
D Kalibatene
Source :
Терапевтический архив, Vol 85, Iss 3, Pp 75-79 (2013)
Publication Year :
2013
Publisher :
"Consilium Medicum" Publishing house, 2013.

Abstract

AIM: To reveal platelet functional changes manifesting as abnormal rate of platelet aggregation in patients with acute cerebral circulatory disorders (ischemic stroke, transient ischemic attack), to evaluate the effect of homocysteine (Hc) on platelet aggregation, depending on the degree of cerebral blood flow disturbances, patients' gender and age, and to estimate the diagnostic value of their associations/MATERIAL AND METHODS: 50 patients aged 33 to 98 years (mean age, 63.7±2.1 years; 20 men and 30 women) with acute cerebral circulatory disorders (18 with transient ischemic attack and 32 with ischemic stroke) were examined. The diagnosis was verified by the results of computed tomography and other clinical examinations. Adenosine diphosphate-, epinephrine-, and collagen-induced platelet aggregation was assessed in platelet-rich plasma; serum Hc concentrations were also studied/RESULTS: Comparison of platelet aggregation and Hc concentration revealed a statistically significant correlation between platelet aggregation with collagen and elevated Hc levels (r=0.376; p0.05). The levels of Hc were statistically significantly higher as cerebral circulatory disorders progressed/CONCLUSION: There was a statistically significantly relationship between collagen-induced platelet aggregation and Hc concentration. The Hc levels were statistically significantly related to the severity of cerebral circulatory disorders and age.

Details

Language :
Russian
ISSN :
00403660 and 23095342
Volume :
85
Issue :
3
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Терапевтический архив
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.231b35cba2e74e10a9f5cc8673f3ffb3
Document Type :
article