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β-Thromboglobulin in Urine and Plasma: Influence of Coronary Risk Factors

Blood platelet activation in vivo was evaluated by measuring β-thromboglobulin in plasma and high molecular weight β-thromboglobulin in urine in hypertensive smoking and nonsmoking middle-aged men n=36 and in normotensive age-matched controls n=40 . We found no significant linear relationships betwe...

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Published in:Thrombosis research 1998-06, Vol.90 (5), p.229-237
Main Authors: Mundal, Håvard Holth, Hjemdahl, Paul, Urdal, Petter, Kierulf, Peter, Perneby, Christina, Berg, Kåre, Gjesdal, Knut
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container_start_page 229
container_title Thrombosis research
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creator Mundal, Håvard Holth
Hjemdahl, Paul
Urdal, Petter
Kierulf, Peter
Perneby, Christina
Berg, Kåre
Gjesdal, Knut
description Blood platelet activation in vivo was evaluated by measuring β-thromboglobulin in plasma and high molecular weight β-thromboglobulin in urine in hypertensive smoking and nonsmoking middle-aged men n=36 and in normotensive age-matched controls n=40 . We found no significant linear relationships between nocturnal or resting urinary high molecular weight β-thromboglobulin and plasma β-thromboglobulin in the combined hypertensive and normotensive groups. The excretion of high molecular weight β-thromboglobulin correlated significantly with diastolic blood pressure when all subjects were pooled. After 60 minutes supine rest, nonsmokers had higher excretion of high molecular weight β-thromboglobulin than smokers. Plasma β-thromboglobulin levels tended to be higher in hypertensives. In multivariate analyses, resting high molecular weight β-thromboglobulin excretion was positively related to diastolic blood pressure and negatively related to smoking, whereas plasma β-thromboglobulin was positively related to diastolic blood pressure and inversely related to apolipoprotein A1 and B. We conclude that urinary high molecular weight β-thromboglobulin and plasma β-thromboglobulin are not closely related, but are complementary analyses, as there are methodological confounders for both variables.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/S0049-3848(98)00062-0
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source ScienceDirect Journals
subjects Adult
beta-Thromboglobulin - metabolism
Biological and medical sciences
Blood coagulation. Blood cells
Blood Pressure
Cigarette smoking
Coronary Disease - blood
Coronary Disease - etiology
Coronary Disease - urine
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
General aspects, investigation methods, hemostasis, fibrinolysis
Humans
Lipoproteins
Male
Medicin och hälsovetenskap
Molecular and cellular biology
Multivariate Analysis
Platelet Activation
Platelet volume
Risk Factors
Smoking
β-thromboglobulin
title β-Thromboglobulin in Urine and Plasma: Influence of Coronary Risk Factors
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