Abstract

The relationships among platelet membrane fluidity, arterial thrombosis tendency, and platelet aggregation and prostanoid formation were investigated after feeding rats diets enriched in (n-6) or (n-3) polyunsaturated fatty acids. For at least 8 weeks, rats were fed a control diet containing 5 energy % (en%) sunflowerseed oil, a diet high in sunflowerseed oil (50 en%) which contains large amounts of 18:2(n-6), or a diet high in marine oil (5 en% sunflowerseed oil plus 45 en% sperm-whale oil) which contains considerable amounts of 20:5(n-3) and its desaturation and elongation products. Compared with the control diet, platelet membrane fluidity, measured by fluorescence polarization using platelets labelled with 1,6-diphenyl-1,3,5-hexatriene, was significantly increased upon feeding of the sunflowerseed-oil diet or the marine-oil diet. Both of these diets lowered arterial thrombosis tendency, measured by Hornstra's loop technique. Aggregation of platelets in whole blood activated with collagen tended to be higher upon sunflowerseed-oil feeding and lower in the marine-oil group. The concomitant formation of thromboxane A 2 was not altered in the sunflowerseed-oil group, but was significantly reduced upon feeding the marine-oil diet. The results indicate that an increase in platelet membrane fluidity may be associated with a reduction in arterial thrombosis tendency. With the techniques used, no direct relationship could be observed among platelet membrane fluidity, platelet aggregation and platelet prostanoid production.

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