1.Current Antiplatelet Treatment Strategy in Patients with Diabetes Mellitus.
Jung Hwa JUNG ; Udaya S TANTRY ; Paul A GURBEL ; Young Hoon JEONG
Diabetes & Metabolism Journal 2015;39(2):95-113
Patients with diabetes mellitus (DM) have accelerated atherosclerosis with an increased risk for atherothrombotic cardiovascular complications. A state of high platelet reactivity and activation, hypercoagulability (prothrombotic state) and a subdued response to standard antiplatelet agents may explain high rate of adverse cardiovascular events in patients with DM. Several antithrombotic treatment strategies have been developed to control the prothrombotic state in patients with DM: dose modification of commonly used agents; use of potent agents; and addition of a third antithrombotic drug (triple therapy) to commonly prescribed dual antiplatelet therapy of aspirin and a P2Y12 inhibitor. The present review aims to provide an overview of the current knowledge on platelet abnormalities in patients with DM, focusing on the challenges and perspectives of antiplatelet treatment strategies in this population.
Aspirin
;
Atherosclerosis
;
Blood Platelets
;
Diabetes Mellitus*
;
Humans
;
Platelet Aggregation Inhibitors
;
Thrombophilia
3.Ethnic Difference of Thrombogenicity in Patients with Cardiovascular Disease: a Pandora Box to Explain Prognostic Differences
Hyun Kuk KIM ; Udaya S. TANTRY ; Hyun-Woong PARK ; Eun-Seok SHIN ; Tobias GEISLER ; Diana A. GOROG ; Paul A GURBEL ; Young-Hoon JEONG
Korean Circulation Journal 2021;51(3):202-221
Arterial and venous atherothrombotic events are finely regulated processes involving a complex interplay between vulnerable blood, vulnerable vessel, and blood stasis. Vulnerable blood (‘thrombogenicity’) comprises complex interactions between cellular components and plasma factors (inflammatory, procoagulant, anticoagulant, and fibrinolytic factors).The extent of thrombogenicity may determine the progression of atheroma and the clinical manifestation of atherothrombotic events, with the highest thrombogenicity in African Americans and lowest in East Asians. Inherent thrombogenicity may influence clinical efficacy and safety of specific antithrombotic treatments in high-risk patients, which may in part explain the observation that East Asian patients have reduced anti-ischemic benefits and elevated bleeding risk with antithrombotic therapy compared to Caucasian patients. In this review, we discuss available evidence regarding the racial differences inthrombogenicity and its impact on clinical outcomes among patients with atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease.
4.Temporal Variability of Platelet Reactivity Phenotype: Another Barrier to Personalized Antiplatelet Strategy Guided by Platelet Function Testing
Young Hoon JEONG ; Udaya S TANTRY ; Paul A GURBEL
Korean Circulation Journal 2019;49(11):1062-1065
No abstract available.
Blood Platelets
;
Humans
;
Phenotype
;
Platelet Function Tests
6.Ethnic Difference of Thrombogenicity in Patients with Cardiovascular Disease: a Pandora Box to Explain Prognostic Differences
Hyun Kuk KIM ; Udaya S. TANTRY ; Hyun-Woong PARK ; Eun-Seok SHIN ; Tobias GEISLER ; Diana A. GOROG ; Paul A GURBEL ; Young-Hoon JEONG
Korean Circulation Journal 2021;51(3):202-221
Arterial and venous atherothrombotic events are finely regulated processes involving a complex interplay between vulnerable blood, vulnerable vessel, and blood stasis. Vulnerable blood (‘thrombogenicity’) comprises complex interactions between cellular components and plasma factors (inflammatory, procoagulant, anticoagulant, and fibrinolytic factors).The extent of thrombogenicity may determine the progression of atheroma and the clinical manifestation of atherothrombotic events, with the highest thrombogenicity in African Americans and lowest in East Asians. Inherent thrombogenicity may influence clinical efficacy and safety of specific antithrombotic treatments in high-risk patients, which may in part explain the observation that East Asian patients have reduced anti-ischemic benefits and elevated bleeding risk with antithrombotic therapy compared to Caucasian patients. In this review, we discuss available evidence regarding the racial differences inthrombogenicity and its impact on clinical outcomes among patients with atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease.