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Increased thrombin generation potential in symptomatic versus asymptomatic moderate or severe carotid stenosis and relationship with cerebral microemboli

Authors :
Rachel T. McGrath
W. O. Tobin
Dominick J. H. McCabe
Bridget Egan
Colin P. Doherty
Mary Paula Colgan
Prakash Madhavan
James S. O’Donnell
M Saqqur
T. M. Feeley
Raymond P. Murphy
Niamh Moran
D. R. Collins
Sean O’Neill
D. O’Neill
Tara Coughlan
Justin A. Kinsella
G. F. Kavanagh
Sean Tierney
George Hamilton
Dermot J. Moore
Joseph Harbison
Source :
Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery & Psychiatry. 86:460-467
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
BMJ, 2014.

Abstract

Introduction The importance of thrombin generation in the pathogenesis of TIA or stroke and its relationship with cerebral microembolic signals (MES) in asymptomatic and symptomatic carotid stenosis has not been comprehensively assessed. Methods Plasma thrombin generation parameters from patients with moderate or severe (≥50%) asymptomatic carotid stenosis were compared with those from patients with symptomatic carotid stenosis in the early ( ≤4 weeks) and late phases (≥3 months) after TIA or stroke in this prospective, pilot observational study. Thrombin generation profile was longitudinally assessed in symptomatic patients with data at each time point. Bilateral transcranial Doppler ultrasound monitoring of the middle cerebral arteries was performed whenever possible to classify patients as MES-positive or MES-negative. Results Data from 31 asymptomatic, 46 ‘early symptomatic’ and 35 ‘late symptomatic’ patients were analysed. Peak thrombin (344.2 nM vs 305.3 nM; p=0.01) and endogenous thrombin potential (1772.4 vs 1589.7; p=0.047) were higher in early symptomatic than asymptomatic patients. Peak thrombin production decreased in symptomatic patients followed up from the early to late phase after TIA or stroke (339.7 nM vs 308.6 nM; p=0.02). Transcranial Doppler ultrasound data were available in 25 asymptomatic, 31 early symptomatic and 27 late symptomatic patients. Early symptomatic MES-positive patients had a shorter ‘time-to-peak thrombin’ than asymptomatic MES-positive patients (p=0.04), suggesting a more procoagulant state in this early symptomatic subgroup. Discussion Thrombin generation potential is greater in patients with recently symptomatic than asymptomatic carotid stenosis, and decreases over time following TIA or stroke associated with carotid stenosis. These data improve our understanding of the haemostatic/thrombotic biomarker profile in moderate-severe carotid stenosis.

Details

ISSN :
1468330X and 00223050
Volume :
86
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery & Psychiatry
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....cdfc76428a9e5a23448913543fbac060
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1136/jnnp-2013-307556