Dogs with hearth diseases causing turbulent high-velocity blood flow have changes in patelet function and von Willebrand factor multimer distribution

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Dogs with hearth diseases causing turbulent high-velocity blood flow have changes in patelet function and von Willebrand factor multimer distribution. / Tarnow, Inge; Kristensen, Annemarie Thuri; Olsen, Lisbeth Høier; Falk, Bo Torkel; Haubro, Lotte; Pedersen, Lotte Gam; Pedersen, Henrik Duelund.

In: Journal of Veterinary Internal Medicine, Vol. 19, 2005, p. 515-522.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Tarnow, I, Kristensen, AT, Olsen, LH, Falk, BT, Haubro, L, Pedersen, LG & Pedersen, HD 2005, 'Dogs with hearth diseases causing turbulent high-velocity blood flow have changes in patelet function and von Willebrand factor multimer distribution', Journal of Veterinary Internal Medicine, vol. 19, pp. 515-522.

APA

Tarnow, I., Kristensen, A. T., Olsen, L. H., Falk, B. T., Haubro, L., Pedersen, L. G., & Pedersen, H. D. (2005). Dogs with hearth diseases causing turbulent high-velocity blood flow have changes in patelet function and von Willebrand factor multimer distribution. Journal of Veterinary Internal Medicine, 19, 515-522.

Vancouver

Tarnow I, Kristensen AT, Olsen LH, Falk BT, Haubro L, Pedersen LG et al. Dogs with hearth diseases causing turbulent high-velocity blood flow have changes in patelet function and von Willebrand factor multimer distribution. Journal of Veterinary Internal Medicine. 2005;19:515-522.

Author

Tarnow, Inge ; Kristensen, Annemarie Thuri ; Olsen, Lisbeth Høier ; Falk, Bo Torkel ; Haubro, Lotte ; Pedersen, Lotte Gam ; Pedersen, Henrik Duelund. / Dogs with hearth diseases causing turbulent high-velocity blood flow have changes in patelet function and von Willebrand factor multimer distribution. In: Journal of Veterinary Internal Medicine. 2005 ; Vol. 19. pp. 515-522.

Bibtex

@article{0616dcd0a1bf11ddb6ae000ea68e967b,
title = "Dogs with hearth diseases causing turbulent high-velocity blood flow have changes in patelet function and von Willebrand factor multimer distribution",
abstract = "The purpose of this prospective study was to investigate platelet function using in vitro tests based on both high and low shear rates and von Willebrand factor (vWf) multimeric composition in dogs with cardiac disease and turbulent high-velocity blood flow. Client-owned asymptomatic, untreated dogs were divided into 4 groups: 14 Cavalier King Charles Spaniels (Cavaliers) with mitral valve prolapse (MVP) and no or minimal mitral regurgitation (MR), 17 Cavaliers with MVP and moderate to severe MR, 14 control dogs, and 10 dogs with subaortic stenosis (SAS). Clinical examinations and echocardiography were performed in all dogs. PFA100 closure times (the ability of platelets to occlude a hole in a membrane at high shear rates), platelet activation markers (plasma thromboxane B2 concentration, platelet surface P-selectin expression), platelet aggregation (in whole blood and platelet-rich plasma with 3 different agonists), and vWf multimers were analyzed. Cavaliers with moderate to severe MR and dogs with SAS had longer closure times and a lower percentage of the largest vWf multimers than did controls. Maximal aggregation responses were unchanged in dogs with SAS but enhaned in Cavaliers with MVP (regardless of MR status) compared with control dogs. No significant difference in platelet activation markers was found among groups. The data suggest that a form of platelet dysfunction detected at high shear rates was present in dogs with MR and SAS, possibly associated with a qualitative vWf defect. Aggregation results suggest increased platelet reactivity in Cavaliers, but the platelets did not appear to circulate in a preactivated state in either disease.",
keywords = "Former LIFE faculty, Arteriosclerosis, Mitral regurgitation, Mitral valve prolapse, Platelet activation, Subaortic stenosis",
author = "Inge Tarnow and Kristensen, {Annemarie Thuri} and Olsen, {Lisbeth H{\o}ier} and Falk, {Bo Torkel} and Lotte Haubro and Pedersen, {Lotte Gam} and Pedersen, {Henrik Duelund}",
year = "2005",
language = "English",
volume = "19",
pages = "515--522",
journal = "Journal of Veterinary Internal Medicine",
issn = "0891-6640",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Dogs with hearth diseases causing turbulent high-velocity blood flow have changes in patelet function and von Willebrand factor multimer distribution

AU - Tarnow, Inge

AU - Kristensen, Annemarie Thuri

AU - Olsen, Lisbeth Høier

AU - Falk, Bo Torkel

AU - Haubro, Lotte

AU - Pedersen, Lotte Gam

AU - Pedersen, Henrik Duelund

PY - 2005

Y1 - 2005

N2 - The purpose of this prospective study was to investigate platelet function using in vitro tests based on both high and low shear rates and von Willebrand factor (vWf) multimeric composition in dogs with cardiac disease and turbulent high-velocity blood flow. Client-owned asymptomatic, untreated dogs were divided into 4 groups: 14 Cavalier King Charles Spaniels (Cavaliers) with mitral valve prolapse (MVP) and no or minimal mitral regurgitation (MR), 17 Cavaliers with MVP and moderate to severe MR, 14 control dogs, and 10 dogs with subaortic stenosis (SAS). Clinical examinations and echocardiography were performed in all dogs. PFA100 closure times (the ability of platelets to occlude a hole in a membrane at high shear rates), platelet activation markers (plasma thromboxane B2 concentration, platelet surface P-selectin expression), platelet aggregation (in whole blood and platelet-rich plasma with 3 different agonists), and vWf multimers were analyzed. Cavaliers with moderate to severe MR and dogs with SAS had longer closure times and a lower percentage of the largest vWf multimers than did controls. Maximal aggregation responses were unchanged in dogs with SAS but enhaned in Cavaliers with MVP (regardless of MR status) compared with control dogs. No significant difference in platelet activation markers was found among groups. The data suggest that a form of platelet dysfunction detected at high shear rates was present in dogs with MR and SAS, possibly associated with a qualitative vWf defect. Aggregation results suggest increased platelet reactivity in Cavaliers, but the platelets did not appear to circulate in a preactivated state in either disease.

AB - The purpose of this prospective study was to investigate platelet function using in vitro tests based on both high and low shear rates and von Willebrand factor (vWf) multimeric composition in dogs with cardiac disease and turbulent high-velocity blood flow. Client-owned asymptomatic, untreated dogs were divided into 4 groups: 14 Cavalier King Charles Spaniels (Cavaliers) with mitral valve prolapse (MVP) and no or minimal mitral regurgitation (MR), 17 Cavaliers with MVP and moderate to severe MR, 14 control dogs, and 10 dogs with subaortic stenosis (SAS). Clinical examinations and echocardiography were performed in all dogs. PFA100 closure times (the ability of platelets to occlude a hole in a membrane at high shear rates), platelet activation markers (plasma thromboxane B2 concentration, platelet surface P-selectin expression), platelet aggregation (in whole blood and platelet-rich plasma with 3 different agonists), and vWf multimers were analyzed. Cavaliers with moderate to severe MR and dogs with SAS had longer closure times and a lower percentage of the largest vWf multimers than did controls. Maximal aggregation responses were unchanged in dogs with SAS but enhaned in Cavaliers with MVP (regardless of MR status) compared with control dogs. No significant difference in platelet activation markers was found among groups. The data suggest that a form of platelet dysfunction detected at high shear rates was present in dogs with MR and SAS, possibly associated with a qualitative vWf defect. Aggregation results suggest increased platelet reactivity in Cavaliers, but the platelets did not appear to circulate in a preactivated state in either disease.

KW - Former LIFE faculty

KW - Arteriosclerosis

KW - Mitral regurgitation

KW - Mitral valve prolapse

KW - Platelet activation

KW - Subaortic stenosis

M3 - Journal article

VL - 19

SP - 515

EP - 522

JO - Journal of Veterinary Internal Medicine

JF - Journal of Veterinary Internal Medicine

SN - 0891-6640

ER -

ID: 7967670