Background Hypercoagulative disturbances are an integral part of atherosclerosis. The estimation of beta-thromboglobulin (BTG) concentrations in the offspring of parents suffering from premature coronary heart disease (CHD) makes it possible to evaluate platelet activity in vivo in this high-risk group, Methods The study included 292 individuals. BTG concentrations in platelet-poor plasma were estimated in 90 offspring (60 boys and 30 girls, aged 7-18 years) of fathers who had experienced a premature infarct (aged 45 years or younger) and in their parents (the main group, n = 185). All the participants were tested under their usual living conditions. Fifty-nine healthy children and adolescents of the same age with no family history of vascular events, diabetes or hypertension, together with their parents, formed the control group (n= 107). Results The mean BTG level in the main group was significantly elevated (86.04 ± 8.14 ng/ml in the boys and 75.57 ± 8.55ng/ml in the girls), when compared with the values for their respective controls (49.30 ± 3.54 ng/ml and 52,56 ± 3.42 ng/ml, P = 0.001 and P = 0.005). High BTG levels (higher than the 95th percentile in the controls) were observed in 33.3 ± 6.1% of the boys and in 23.3 ± 7.7% of the girls in the main group. Twelve months later, a follow-up study of 16 offspring from the main group and 1 2 from the control group demonstrated that the increase in BTG levels in children and adolescents with infarction heredity over those observed in children without such a background was sustained (85.86 ± 1 6.88 ng/ml compared with 75.90 ± 1 4.02 ng/ml, P < 0.5). Significantly raised levels of BTG were also detected in the wives of men who had experienced premature infarcts, when these women were compared with respective controls (86.1 3 ± 9.85 ng/ml and 45.04 ± 4.82 ng/ml, P = 0.0001). Conclusion Spontaneous platelet activation in vivo under normal living conditions was observed in a considerable proportion of children and adolescents with a family history of premature CHD, This activation is expected to constitute an endogenous risk-factor and is probably one of the mechanisms by which atherosclerosis advances before it becomes clinically apparent. © 1997, European Society of Cardiology. All rights reserved.
CITATION STYLE
Akimova, E. V., & Bogmat, L. F. (1997). Premature coronary heart disease: The influence of positive family history on platelet activity in vivo in children and adolescents (family study). European Journal of Cardiovascular Prevention & Rehabilitation, 4(1), 13–18. https://doi.org/10.1177/174182679700400103
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