The Egyptian Journal of Neurology, Psychiatry and Neurosurgery (Sep 2021)

Evaluation of platelets activity and reactivity as risk factors for acute ischemic non-embolic stroke in young adults

  • Hebat-Allah Hassan Nashaat,
  • Alaa El-Din Saad Abdelhamid,
  • Amal Sayed Ahmed,
  • Ahmed Osama Hosny,
  • Mohamed A. Saad,
  • Mohammed El Samahy,
  • Amany Moustafa Hassan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s41983-021-00373-6
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 57, no. 1
pp. 1 – 10

Abstract

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Abstract Background Ischemic stroke (IS) constitutes a relevant health concern recently in younger population causing permanent cognitive and function-limiting disability and ranks as the 3rd cause of death in Egypt after cardiac and hepatic diseases. Platelet activation has a crucial mechanism in arterial thrombogenesis, thus in pathophysiology of IS. Surface expression of P-selectin (CD62P) reflects platelet activation and measured by flowcytometry. The purpose of the study is to evaluate whether platelet activity and reactivity are considered risk factors for IS so more restrict antiplatelet protocols could be implemented for management and recurrence prevention. Results Study population was 60 IS patients and 60 apparently healthy age and gender-matched controls. Patients were subdivided into 37 patients without classical risk factors, aged 46.1 ± 8.2, and 23 patients with > 1 vascular risk factors, aged 52 ± 9.9. The percentage of platelets expressing CD62P reflecting ex vivo baseline activity was significantly higher in stroke patients to controls (p = 0.001), also platelet reactivity (CD62P expression after ADP provocation) was statistically significantly elevated in patients than in controls (p < 0.0001) and was significantly higher in IS patients with vascular risk factors compared to patients without risk factors (p = 0.02). Conclusion Both baseline platelet activity and reactivity were significantly higher in IS patients, and were also higher in IS patients with other vascular risk factors than in cryptogenic stroke and considered risk factors for IS.

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