Literature DB >> 28438028

Cardiac rehabilitation programme as a non-pharmacological platelet inhibitory tool in acute coronary syndrome survivors.

Emese Tóth-Zsámboki1, Zsófia Horváth1,2, László Hajtman1, Sarolta Leé1,2, Éva Pállinger3, Eszter Kuklis4, Ádám Tahy4, György Fekete4, László Kohut5, Róbert G Kiss1.   

Abstract

Background Acute coronary syndrome is associated with platelet hyperactivity, which in its persistent form, promotes recurrent thrombotic events. Complex cardiac rehabilitation after acute coronary syndrome improves clinical outcome; however, its effect on platelet hyperactivity is unknown. Design and methods We enrolled 84 acute coronary syndrome patients on dual antiplatelet therapy, who underwent a new complex cardiac rehabilitation programme (NovaCord physiotherapy, lifestyle counselling, strict diet, stress management and regular coaching) and 51 control acute coronary syndrome patients with traditional cardiac rehabilitation. Platelet functionality was determined at enrolment and at three months follow-up by aggregometry, serum platelet-derived growth factor levels, total- and platelet-derived microvesicle counts (PMV; CD41a+/CD61+, CD62P+). Results Platelet aggregation parameters and platelet-derived growth factor levels were significantly decreased in the complex cardiac rehabilitation group at three months (1 µg/ml collagen, median (interquartile range): 22 (10-45) vs 14 (7.5-25.5)%, p = 0.0015; 2 µg/ml collagen: 36 (22-60) vs 26.5 (16-37)%, p = 0.0019; 1.25 µM adenosine-diphosphate: 4.5 (1-10) vs 1 (0-3)%, p = 0.0006; 5 µM adenosine-diphosphate: 27 (16-38) vs 22 (12-31)%, p = 0.0078; epinephrine: 33 (15-57) vs 27 (12-43)%, p = 0.01; platelet-derived growth factor: 434.6 (256.0-622.7) vs 224.8 (148.5-374.1) pg/ml, p = 0.0001). In contrast, these changes were absent or did not reach statistical significance in the traditional cardiac rehabilitation group. Platelet-derived microvesicle counts were significantly decreased in both groups, while total microvesicle count was significantly reduced only in the complex cardiac rehabilitation group (median (interquartile range): 3945.5 (2138-5661) vs 1739 (780-2303) count/µl; p = 0.0001). Conclusions Platelet hyperactivity three months after acute coronary syndrome significantly decreased in patients undergoing complex cardiac rehabilitation. Besides dual antiplatelet therapy, effective management and comprehensive control of cardiovascular risk factors might represent a new, non-pharmacological approach to influence platelet functionality.

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Keywords:  Acute coronary syndromes; cardiac rehabilitation; dual antiplatelet therapy; platelet aggregation; platelet hyperactivity; platelet-derived growth factor; platelet-derived microvesicles

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Year:  2017        PMID: 28438028     DOI: 10.1177/2047487317704937

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur J Prev Cardiol        ISSN: 2047-4873            Impact factor:   7.804


  2 in total

1.  Meta-analysis of duration of dual antiplatelet therapy in patients with acute coronary syndrome after percutaneous coronary intervention.

Authors:  Safi U Khan; Irbaz Bin Riaz; Hammad Rahman; Ahmed N Lone; Munis Raza; Muhammad Shahzeb Khan; Anum Riaz; Edo Kaluski
Journal:  Eur J Prev Cardiol       Date:  2018-08-28       Impact factor: 7.804

2.  Aerobic exercise-based cardiac rehabilitation in Chinese patients with coronary heart disease: study protocol for a pilot randomized controlled trial.

Authors:  Richard Y Cao; Hongchao Zheng; Qiongyao Mi; Qing Li; Wenchao Yuan; Yueyou Ding; Jian Yang
Journal:  Trials       Date:  2018-07-09       Impact factor: 2.279

  2 in total

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