Objective
To analyse composition of coronary thrombus in vivo, in ST-elevation Myocardial Infarction (STEMI) patients.
Background
The dynamic process of intracoronary thrombus formation in STEMI patients is poorly understood.
Methods
Intracoronary thrombi (n=45) were obtained by thromboaspiration in 288 consecutive STEMI patients presenting for primary percutaneous intervention and analyzed using high definition pictures taken with a scanning electron microscope. Plasma biomarkers (TnI, CRPus, IL-6, PAI-1, sCD40 ligand and TNF-α) and plasma fibrin clots viscoelastic properties were measured simultaneously on peripheral blood.
Results
Thrombi were mainly composed of fibrin (55.9±18%) with platelets (16.8±18%), erythrocytes (11.5±9%), cholesterol crystal (5.2±8.4%) and leukocytes (1.3±2.0%). The median ischemic time was 175 min [IQR 140-297]. Ischemic time impacted thrombi composition, resulting in a positive correlation with intracoronary thrombus fibrin content, r=0.38, p=0.01 and a negative correlation with platelet content r=-0.34, p=0.02. Thus, fibrin content increased with ischemic time, ranging from 48.4±21% (<3 hours) up to 66.9±9% (>6 hours) (p=0.02), while platelet content decreased from 24.9±23% (<3 hours) to 9.1±6% (>6 hours) (p=0.07). Soluble CD40 ligand was positively correlated to platelet content in the thrombus (r=0.40, p=0.02) and negatively correlated with fibrin content (r=-0.36; p=0.04). Multivariate analysis indicated that ischemic time was the only predictor of thrombus composition with a 2-fold increase of fibrin-content per ischemic hour (adjusted OR2 [1.03-3.7] p=0.01).
Conclusions
In acute STEMI, platelet and fibrin contents of the occlusive thrombus are highly dependent of ischemic time, which may have a direct impact on the efficacy of drugs or devices used for coronary reperfusion.
In this global meta-analysis, reduced CYP2C19 function appears to expose clopidogrel-treated patients to excess cardiovascular risk and mortality. Conflicting results among studies may be explained by differences in types and/or levels of risk of patients.
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