Abstract

BackgroundPlatelets are involved in the thromboses that are central to myocardial infarctions and ischemic strokes. Such adverse cardiovascular events have day/night patterns with peaks in the morning (∼9AM), potentially related to endogenous circadian clock control of platelet activation. The objective was to test if the human endogenous circadian system influences (1) platelet function and (2) platelet response to standardized behavioral stressors. We also aimed to compare the magnitude of any effects on platelet function caused by the circadian system with that caused by varied standardized behavioral stressors, including mental arithmetic, passive postural tilt and mild cycling exercise.Methodology/Principal FindingsWe studied 12 healthy adults (6 female) who lived in individual laboratory suites in dim light for 240 h, with all behaviors scheduled on a 20-h recurring cycle to permit assessment of endogenous circadian function independent from environmental and behavioral effects including the sleep/wake cycle. Circadian phase was assessed from core body temperature. There were highly significant endogenous circadian rhythms in platelet surface activated glycoprotein (GP) IIb-IIIa, GPIb and P-selectin (6–17% peak-trough amplitudes; p≤0.01). These circadian peaks occurred at a circadian phase corresponding to 8–9AM. Platelet count, ATP release, aggregability, and plasma epinephrine also had significant circadian rhythms but with later peaks (corresponding to 3–8PM). The circadian effects on the platelet activation markers were always larger than that of any of the three behavioral stressors.Conclusions/SignificanceThese data demonstrate robust effects of the endogenous circadian system on platelet activation in humans—independent of the sleep/wake cycle, other behavioral influences and the environment. The ∼9AM timing of the circadian peaks of the three platelet surface markers, including platelet surface activated GPIIb-IIIa, the final common pathway of platelet aggregation, suggests that endogenous circadian influences on platelet function could contribute to the morning peak in adverse cardiovascular events as seen in many epidemiological studies.

Highlights

  • The risks for major adverse cardiovascular events, including myocardial infarction, stroke, and sudden cardiac death, have daily patterns with peaks in the morning (,6AM-noon) [1,2,3]

  • We aimed to compare the magnitude of any effects on platelet function caused by the circadian system with the magnitude of any effects caused by varied standardized behaviors, including mental stress, passive postural tilt and mild exercise

  • There were no significant interactions between circadian phase and time into the behavioral test battery; so all reported statistics are based on mixed model ANOVA’s across circadian phase without interaction

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Summary

Introduction

The risks for major adverse cardiovascular events, including myocardial infarction, stroke, and sudden cardiac death, have daily patterns with peaks in the morning (,6AM-noon) [1,2,3] These peaks may be related to the morning peak in platelet function [4], which plays a critical role in the formation of an occlusive thrombus [5]. We aimed to compare the magnitude of any effects on platelet function caused by the circadian system with the magnitude of any effects caused by varied standardized behaviors, including mental stress, passive postural tilt and mild exercise We used both flow cytometry and whole blood aggregability (WBA) testing to assess platelet function. Platelets are involved in the thromboses that are central to myocardial infarctions and ischemic strokes Such adverse cardiovascular events have day/night patterns with peaks in the morning (,9AM), potentially related to endogenous circadian clock control of platelet activation. We aimed to compare the magnitude of any effects on platelet function caused by the circadian system with that caused by varied standardized behavioral stressors, including mental arithmetic, passive postural tilt and mild cycling exercise

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