Background: Oxidative stress is thought to play an important role in atherosclerotic vascular disease. Recently, it has become possible to quantitatively measure thioredoxin, a marker of oxidative stress in human plasma. A platelet aggregometer that uses laser-light scattering enables minimal changes in platelet aggregability to be monitored; however, the relationship between oxidative stress and platelet aggregability in vivo is not well understood.
Methods: We investigated plasma thioredoxin levels and platelet aggregability, in particular small platelet aggregates, in 45 patients with acute myocardial infarction (AMI); we compared the results with 33 patients with stable exertional angina (SEA) and 30 patients with chest pain syndrome (CPS).
Results: The plasma thioredoxin levels and the degree of small platelet aggregates were higher in the AMI group than in the SEA and the CPS groups: in the AMI group, at 4 weeks after admission, both of those parameters were significantly decreased (P <.01), but they were still higher (P <.05) than in the SEA or the CPS group. There was a significant positive correlation between small platelet aggregates and plasma thioredoxin levels (rho = 0.354, P =.0002). We divided the AMI patients into 2 groups according to the 75 percentile of plasma thioredoxin levels on admission. At the chronic phase, the left ventricular ejection fraction was significantly higher in the lower thioredoxin group than in the higher thioredoxin group.
Conclusions: We showed that plasma thioredoxin levels and platelet aggregability increased concomitantly in patients with AMI. In these patients, increased plasma thioredoxin was associated with platelet hyperaggregability and lower left ventricular ejection fraction.