Mental-stress-induced platelet activation among patients with coronary artery disease
- PMID: 19251865
- DOI: 10.1097/PSY.0b013e31819cc751
Mental-stress-induced platelet activation among patients with coronary artery disease
Abstract
Objective: To study patients with coronary artery disease (CAD) scheduled for coronary angioplasty and to examine platelet activation in response to mental stress as a potential mechanism involved in the association between psychosocial factors and cardiac outcomes. Psychosocial factors have been identified as risk factors for CAD and adverse cardiac outcomes, although the underlying mechanisms are poorly understood.
Methods: Markers of platelet activation and platelet reactivity in response to experimentally induced mental stress (mental arithmetic and anger recall) were examined, using flow cytometry analysis and beta-thromboglobulin (BTG) assays among 249 CAD patients (age = 60.3 +/- 9.0 years, 15% women) who were scheduled to undergo elective percutaneous coronary intervention.
Results: Mental stress-induced increases in platelet activation (CD41 (GP IIb/IIIa), p = .002; percent of mononuclear cells positive for CD41, p = .01; CD62P (P-selectin) expression, p = .005; and percent platelets positive for CD62P, p < .001). The degree of platelet reactivity was not related to demographic, clinical, or psychological variables, or cardiovascular hemodynamic changes.
Conclusions: Experimentally induced mental stress induced platelet activation in patients with CAD. This mechanism may partially explain the link between psychosocial variables and the development of adverse cardiac outcomes in patients with CAD.
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