Abstract

The aim of the work to determine the features of hemostasis and blood rheology in patients with arterial hypertension (HTN) and multifocal atherosclerosis (MFA).Materials and methods. The study enrolled male and female patients aged from 40 to 70 years, including 59 patients with controlled stage I–II hypertension and multifocal vascular lesions (Group 1) and 42 patients with controlled stage III hypertension, who have suffered an ischemic stroke and have multifocal vascular lesions (Group 2). A test using the Thrombodynamics analyser system T-2 (GemaKor, LLC, Moscow, Russia) was performed to detect the impairment of hemostasis.Results. Patients with HTN and MFA have an impaired coagulation hemostasis system (an increase in the initial and stationary clot growth rate and the size of the clot, as well as the presence of spontaneous clots), which leads to a high residual risk of cerebral complications, despite BP lowering to target figures and control of lipid profile.Discussion. Elevated blood pressure in patients with MFA leads to endothelial dysfunction, which is accompanied by activation of coagulation and fibrinolysis pathways. These changes lead to a violation of microcirculatory hemostasis in the brain, the development and progression of cerebral ischemia, and subsequently the occurrence of stroke, both the first and repeated.Conclusion. An important result of this study is the first registered change in the coagulation link of hemostasis in patients with HTN and MFA aged from 40 to 70 years, which can be considered an additional criterion for stroke prediction.

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