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Stroke. 2009;40:2275
Published online before print April 30, 2009, doi: 10.1161/STROKEAHA.108.537654
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(Stroke. 2009;40:2275.)
© 2009 American Heart Association, Inc.


Controversies in Stroke

Antiplatelet Activity

Stephen M. Davis, MD, FRACP Geoffrey A. Donnan, MD, FRACP

From Royal Melbourne Hospital, University of Melbourne, Parkville, Victoria, Australia.

Correspondence to Stephen M. Davis, MD, FRACP, Royal Melbourne Hospital, University of Melbourne, Parkville, Victoria Australia 3050. E-mail stephen.davis@mh.org.au


Key Words: antiplatelet RX • antiplatelet • secondary prevention • ischemic stroke


An extract of the first 250 words of the full text is provided, because this article has no abstract.
 

How has the need to measure antiplatelet activity arisen? First, we do routinely measure hematologic or physiological surrogates for other effective secondary prevention strategies. Specifically, international normalized ratio monitoring is used to determine warfarin dosage; blood pressure is the yardstick for titration of antihypertensive agents and glycemic control using HbA1c in diabetes.1 In these cases, clinical efficacy is usually related to these surrogates. Furthermore, a significant proportion of patients on antiplatelet therapy have clinical events, suggesting a variability of therapeutic effect. Hence, the concept of biological measurement of antiplatelet function is attractive to determine likely treatment responders.

Although the concept of measuring antiplatelet activity is appealing, there appears to be a disconnect between theory and reality. There are 2 issues of importance. These include the lack of a gold standard measure of antiplatelet functioning together with the paucity of evidence linking antiplatelet resistance and recurrent vascular events in a stroke population. A major concern with a number of these measures is poor agreement between different techniques for antiplatelet resistance and poor reproducibility over time. Indeed, these confounding factors are a major impediment in the use of these tests in prediction of future vascular events.2 Despite this, there is some evidence linking aspirin resistance to composite vascular outcomes of stroke, myocardial infarction, and vascular death.3 In addition, aspirin resistance is common, 30% prevalence in a stroke population.4

So, is this avenue of research worth pursuing? We think it is. This would include better techniques with better evidence of reproducibility and correlations . . . [Full Text of this Article]