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Platelets play a key role in atherogenesis and thromboembolic complications in patients with type 2 diabetes. We prospectively examined the relationship between systemic platelet activation and progression of carotid wall thickness within 1 year in 105 patients with type 2 diabetes. The intima-media thickness (IMT) of the common carotid artery was measured bilaterally at study entry and after 1 year. Platelet activation was assessed with the use of immunologic markers of platelet activation (CD62P, CD63, and CD40L) and flow cytometry. The prevalence for progression of atherosclerotic carotid disease in this population was 55.2%. We found that platelet degranulation (CD63 and CD40L) correlated with progression of IMT within 1 year (CD63: r=0.231, P=0.022; CD40L: r=0.230, P=0.029). Diabetic patients with progression of IMT had a significantly increased expression of CD63 compared with patients with stable carotid disease (mean intensity of immunofluorescence; median, interquartile range: 17.1 [12.4, 25.8] versus 11.9 [7.7, 19.8]; P=0.004). Multivariate logistic regression analysis revealed that degranulation of platelet CD63 is a predictor for progression of IMT independently of classical cardiovascular risk factors and hemoglobin A1c in diabetic patients (P=0.017). Enhanced systemic platelet degranulation is associated with progression of carotid artery disease in type 2 diabetes.

Citation

Suzanne Fateh-Moghadam, Zonyang Li, Simon Ersel, Thomas Reuter, Patrik Htun, Ursula Plöckinger, Wolfgang Bocksch, Rainer Dietz, Meinrad Gawaz. Platelet degranulation is associated with progression of intima-media thickness of the common carotid artery in patients with diabetes mellitus type 2. Arteriosclerosis, thrombosis, and vascular biology. 2005 Jun;25(6):1299-303

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PMID: 15817881

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