Trends among platelet function, arterial calcium, and vascular function measures

Jason Cunha, Melissa V. Chan, Bongani B. Nkambule, Florian Thibord, Amber Lachapelle, Robin E. Pashek, Ramachandran S. Vasan, Jian Rong, Emelia J. Benjamin, Naomi M. Hamburg, Ming Huei Chen, Gary F. Mitchell, Andrew D. Johnson

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

2 Scopus citations

Abstract

Arterial tonometry and vascular calcification measures are useful in cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk assessment. Prior studies found associations between tonometry measures, arterial calcium, and CVD risk. Activated platelets release angiopoietin-1 and other factors, which may connect vascular structure and platelet function. We analyzed arterial tonometry, platelet function, aortic, thoracic and coronary calcium, and thoracic and abdominal aorta diameters measured in the Framingham Heart Study Gen3/NOS/OMNI-2 cohorts (n = 3,429, 53.7% women, mean age 54.4 years ±9.3). Platelet reactivity in whole blood or platelet-rich plasma was assessed using 5 assays and 7 agonists. We analyzed linear mixed effects models with platelet reactivity phenotypes as outcomes, adjusting for CVD risk factors and family structure. Higher arterial calcium trended with higher platelet reactivity, whereas larger aortic diameters trended with lower platelet reactivity. Characteristic impedance (Zc) and central pulse pressure positively trended with various platelet traits, while pulse wave velocity and Zc negatively trended with collagen, ADP, and epinephrine traits. All results did not pass a stringent multiple test correction threshold (p < 2.22e-04). The diameter trends were consistent with lower shear environments invoking less platelet reactivity. The vessel calcium trends were consistent with subclinical atherosclerosis and platelet activation being inter-related.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article number2238835
JournalPlatelets
Volume34
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - 2023

Keywords

  • Aortic diameter
  • Platelet
  • arterial tonometry
  • epidemiology
  • vascular calcification

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Hematology

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