CAN ACETYLSALICYLIC ACID ALONE PREVENT ARTERIAL THROMBOEMBOLISM? A PILOT STUDY IN PATIENTS wITH AORTIC BALL VALVE PROSTHESES
- 12 January 1981
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Acta Medica Scandinavica
- Vol. 209 (S645) , 73-78
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.0954-6820.1981.tb02603.x
Abstract
Encouraged by the effective prevention of arterial thromboembolism with a combination of ASA and anticoagulants (9), the present study was done in 77 patients with a single Starr-Edwards aortic ball valve. They received one gm. of ASA daily, then the dose of anticoagulants was reduced gradually and the drug discontinued on average five weeks later. Six arterial embolic episodes occurred in five patients, the incidence being 14.5 complications per 100 patients per year. Five emboli were cerebral, none of them serious, and one was removed from a femoral artery. Four of the embolic episodes occurred in three of the 11 patients with continuous arrhythmia, probably from venous thrombi that developed in the left atrium. The occurence of only two embolic complications in the 66 patients with sinus rhythm suggests some prevention of arterial thrombus formation on the prosthetic valves. The results indicate that ASA is inferior to anticoagulants in patients with arrhythmia, while it may represent an alternative to anticoagulation in individuals with sinus rhythm. we prefer, however, the combined thereapy in patients with aortic valve prostheses because of the strong anti-thrombotic effect achieved by this treatment.This publication has 22 references indexed in Scilit:
- Reduced platelet adhesiveness in patients with prosthetic ball valves: Relation to adenosine diphosphate and mechanical traumaAmerican Heart Journal, 1977
- Prevention of arterial thromboembolism with acetylsalicylic acidAmerican Heart Journal, 1977
- Arterial thromboembolic complications in patients with Starr-Edwards aortic ball valve prosthesesAmerican Heart Journal, 1976
- Thrombosis on Bjork-Shiley aortic valve prosthesis: Clinical, arteriographic, echocardiographic and therapeutic observations in seven casesThe American Journal of Cardiology, 1974
- A Randomized Controlled Trial of Acetyl Salicyclic Acid in the Secondary Prevention of Mortality from Myocardial InfarctionBMJ, 1974
- Thromboembolic complications of heart valve prosthesesAmerican Heart Journal, 1971
- Thromboembolic Complications of Prosthetic Cardiac ValvesCirculation, 1968
- Late Results of Cardiac-Valve ReplacementCirculation, 1968
- Effect of cessation of anticoagulant therapy on the course of ischaemic heart disease.BMJ, 1966
- The Rebound Phenomenon-Fact or Fancy?Circulation, 1965