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Publications (3)9.19 Total impact

  • Article: Mean platelet volume: a link between thrombosis and inflammation?
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    ABSTRACT: Platelet activation is a link in the pathophysiology of diseases prone to thrombosis and inflammation. Numerous platelet markers, including mean platelet volume (MPV), have been investigated in connection with both thrombosis and inflammation. This review considers MPV as a prognostic and therapeutic marker as well as the factors influencing its measurement. Established cardiovascular risk factors, such as smoking, hypertension, dyslipidemia, and diabetes, can influence MPV, depending on confounding factors. Low-grade inflammation is one such factor. Evidence, particularly derived from prospective studies and a meta-analysis, suggest a correlation between an increase in MPV and the risk of thrombosis. High MPV associates with a variety of established risk factors, cardio- and cerebrovascular disorders, and low-grade inflammatory conditions prone to arterial and venous thromboses. High-grade inflammatory diseases, such as active rheumatoid arthritis or attacks of familial Mediterranean fever, present with low levels of MPV, which reverse in the course of anti-inflammatory therapy. Lifestyle modification, antihypertensive, lipid lowering and diet therapies can also affect MPV values, but these effects need to be investigated in large prospective studies with thrombotic endpoints.
    Current pharmaceutical design 01/2011; 17(1):47-58. · 4.41 Impact Factor
  • Article: Platelet function in rheumatoid arthritis: arthritic and cardiovascular implications.
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    ABSTRACT: Patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) are at high risk of cardiovascular events. Platelet biomarkers are involved in inflammation, atherosclerosis and thrombosis. Cardiovascular and RA-associated factors can alter the structure and function of platelets, starting from megakaryocytopoiesis. Reactive megakaryocytopoiesis increases circulating platelets count and triggers hyperactivity. Hyperactive platelets target synovial membranes with subsequent local rheumatoid inflammation. Hyperactive platelets interact with other cells, and target the vascular wall. Accumulating evidence suggests that disease modifying anti-rheumatic drugs (DMARD) decrease platelet activity.
    Rheumatology International 04/2010; 31(2):153-64. · 1.88 Impact Factor
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    Article: The rationale for comparative studies of accelerated atherosclerosis in rheumatic diseases.
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    ABSTRACT: The inflammatory pathogenesis of atherosclerosis is now well-established, owing to in vitro and in vivo studies and the application of high sensitivity assays for C-reactive protein (CRP) in the general population and specific groups at risk for cardiovascular disease (CVD). In view of the complexity of inflammation-induced atherosclerosis, the rationale for comparative studies of atherogenesis in rheumatic diseases with diverse inflammatory pathogenesis seems obvious; they are human in vivo models to study inflammatory mechanisms involved in atherosclerosis and the impact of treatment. Factors implicated in atherogenesis in systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), rheumatoid arthritis (RA), familial Mediterranean fever (FMF) and Behçet's disease (BD) are discussed in this review. Evidence suggests that enhanced atherosclerosis causes premature cardiovascular events in the autoimmune disease, SLE, and the "high-grade" inflammatory rheumatic disease, RA. Preliminary data suggest that enhanced atherogenesis may accompany FMF in the absence of sufficient suppression of inflammation by colchicine. In the setting of BD, the role of atherosclerosis in the premature manifestation of coronary pathology has not been confirmed; coronary vasculitis and aneurysms appear to constitute the basis of myocardial infarction (MI) in BD. A variety of established and novel risk factors are believed to influence enhanced atherogenesis in rheumatic diseases. Antiphospholipid antibodies are thought to be intimately involved in atherogenesis in SLE and to a lesser extend in RA. CRP may play a more universal role in all rheumatic diseases. The application of high resolution ultrasound of peripheral arteries and other non-invasive techniques may allow targeted use of statins, ACE inhibitors, antiplatelet agents and other cardioprotective drugs in patients with rheumatic diseases, but this needs to be evaluated specifically in prospective studies.
    Current Vascular Pharmacology 01/2010; 8(4):437-49. · 2.90 Impact Factor