Abstract

In peripheral arterial disease (PAD) risk of thrombosis is high and systemic haemostatic derangement thought contributory. We investigated platelet and coagulatory activity in patients with PAD and sought to find the best disease indicator. Stagnation point flow adhesio-aggregometry (SPAA) enables real-time quantitative assessment of platelet adhesion and aggregation under well-defined flow conditions. SPAA and agonist-induced aggregometry (Born method) were performed and concentrations of fibrinogen, fibrin monomer (FM), D-dimer, and thrombin-antithrombin complex (TAT) measured in 92 PAD patients and 70 healthy volunteers. Agonist-induced aggregometry detected no differences between patients and controls. SPAA-measured platelet adhesion and spontaneous aggregation (p < 0.001), and concentrations of fibrinogen (p < 0.001), FM (p < 0.001), TAT (p < 0.02) and D-dimer (p < 0.001) were all significantly increased in patients. Neither platelet function nor coagulatory activity was altered in patients receiving aspirin. Sensitivity and specificity in detecting PAD were as follows: SPAA (95%,93%), fibrinogen (36%,91%), FM (48%,84%), TAT (36%,78%), D-dimer (73%,80%). Our findings support the concept of ongoing thrombogenesis as being contributory to the progression and possibly to the initiation of PAD. Aspirin alone did not prevent haemostatic hyperreactivity in these patients and flow-mediated platelet function was the most sensitive and specific indicator of advanced disease. This technique thus appears to be valuable, not only for evaluating therapeutic strategies to prevent platelet activation, but also in elaborating platelet-related mechanisms involved in thrombogenesis and atheroma formation.

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