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Paper Title

Low intracellular magnesium levels promote platelet-dependent thrombosis in patients with coronary artery disease

Authors

C. Noel Bairey Merz
C. Noel Bairey Merz
Michael Shechter
Michael Shechter
Sanjay Kaul
Sanjay Kaul

Article Type

Research Article

Research Impact Tools

Issue

Volume : 140 | Issue : 2 | Page No : 212-218

Published On

August, 2000

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Abstract

Background Although reduced intracellular levels of magnesium have been described in patients with acute myocardial infarction, its significance as a regulator of thrombosis remains unknown. Methods and Results To determine whether reduced intracellular levels of magnesium enhance platelet-dependent thrombosis, we evaluated 42 patients with coronary artery disease (CAD) by exposing porcine aortic media to their flowing unanticoagulated venous blood for 5 minutes by using an ex vivo perfusion (Badimon) chamber. Baseline analysis demonstrated significant associations between intracellular levels of magnesium, platelet-dependent thrombosis (P =.02), and platelet P-selectin (CD62P) expression (P <.05). Patients were divided into 2 groups: below (n = 22) and above (n = 20) the median intracellular levels of magnesium (1.12 μg/mg protein). There were no significant differences in age, body mass index, serum lipids, fibrinogen, platelet count, or serum magnesium levels between the two groups. Platelet-dependent thrombosis was significantly higher in patients with intracellular levels of magnesium below compared with above median (150 ± 128 vs 45 ± 28 μm2/mm, P <.004). Neither platelet aggregation nor CD62P expression was significantly different between the two groups. Conclusions Platelet-dependent thrombosis was significantly increased in patients with stable CAD with low intracellular levels of magnesium, suggesting a potential role for magnesium supplementation in CAD. (Am Heart J 2000;140:212-8.)

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