International Journal of Endocrinology (Jan 2010)

Effect of Glucose or Fat Challenge on Aspirin Resistance in Diabetes

  • Hussein N. Yassine,
  • Grace Davis-Gorman,
  • Craig S. Stump,
  • Stephen S. Thomson,
  • Justin Peterson,
  • Paul F. McDonagh

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1155/2010/820876
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2010

Abstract

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Aspirin has lower antiplatelet activity in diabetic patients. Our aim is to study the roles of acute hyperglycemia and hyperlipidemia on aspirin function in diabetic subjects with and without cardiovascular disease. Using urine thromboxane (pg/mg creatinine) and VerifyNow (Aspirin Resistance Measures-ARU), we investigated diabetic subjects during a 2-hour glucose challenge (n=49) or a 4-hour fat challenge (n=11). All subjects were currently taking aspirin (81 or 325 mg). After fat ingestion, urine thromboxane increased in all subjects (Mean ± SE before: after) (1209 ± 336: 1552 ±371, P=.01), while we noted a trend increase in VerifyNow measures (408±8: 431±18, P=.1). The response to glucose ingestion was variable. Diabetic subjects with cardiac disease and dyslipidemia increased thromboxane (1693±364: 2799 ± 513, P<.05) and VerifyNow (457.6 ± 22.3: 527.1 ± 25.8, P<.05) measures after glucose. We conclude that saturated fat ingestion increases in vivo thromboxane production despite aspirin therapy.