Diabetes and acute stress hyperglycemia differently influence coronary thrombus composition in STEMI patients after primary PCI.
Poster
Data di Pubblicazione:
2015
Abstract:
Background: Acute coronary thrombosis is the critical event for STEMI. The local inflammatory
microenvironment (cellular effectors and soluble mediators) influences thrombus formation and
evolution. We aimed to evaluate the influence of diabetes and acute hyperglycemia on coronary
thrombus composition in STEMI patients.
Methods: We studied 49 STEMI patients undergoing primary PCI (Male 75%, mean age 66±13 SD,
diabetes 20%). Intracoronary thrombus composition analysis was based on the presence of fresh
material (inflammatory cells, platelet aggregates and fibrin) vs. organized material (connective
tissue, smooth muscle cells), as well as on the level of CD3+ T-cell infiltration
(immunohistochemistry). Hyperglycemia was defined as an admission plasma glucose level of >=126
mg/dl. Routinely laboratory data concerning differential and total leukocyte and platelet count,
glycemia, CRP and fibrinogen, were collected in peripheral blood samples at the admission.
Results: Diabetes was significantly associated with a higher CD3+T-cell thrombus infiltration (>=150
cells/mm2) (p=0.0231), while acute hyperglycemia was mainly associated with a fresh thrombus
composition (p=0.0114). Acute hyperglycemia was associated with higher levels of CRP (p=0.0563),
fibrinogen (p=0.0792), neutrophil/lymphocyte ratio (p=0.0086) and platelet/lymphocyte ratio
(p=0.0042); no association in diabetic patients.
Conclusions: In STEMI, acute hyperglycemia seems to influence the innate immune-mediated
inflammatory response in thrombus composition, while diabetes seems to be mainly involved in
thrombus recruitment of adaptive immune cellular effectors.
Tipologia CRIS:
04.03 Poster in Atti di convegno
Elenco autori:
AL KAYAL, Tamer; Sbrana, Silverio; Losi, Paola
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