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  • Title: Neutrophil depletion suppresses 111In-labeled platelet accumulation in infarcted myocardium.
    Author: Bednar M, Smith B, Pinto A, Mullane KM.
    Journal: J Cardiovasc Pharmacol; 1985; 7(5):906-12. PubMed ID: 2413299.
    Abstract:
    Platelets and neutrophils accumulate rapidly in infarcted myocardium. Although antineutrophil agents reduce the size of the infarcted area, this is not observed with antiplatelet drugs. The possibility that myocardial ischemia-induced platelet deposition was secondary to a neutrophil-mediated event was assessed by injecting prostacyclin-washed autologous 111In-labeled platelets and measuring the amount of radioactivity in different regions of the heart following 90-min occlusion of the left anterior descending coronary artery followed by reperfusion for periods up to 5 h. Platelet deposition during the reperfusion phase was linear with time and similar to the time course of neutrophil accumulation. There was a transmural distribution of radioactivity across the myocardium where the "zone" between infarcted and risk regions, called the "interface," greater than infarct greater than risk greater than normal. Neutropenia (21 +/- 2% control levels), induced with specific sheep anti-dog neutrophil antiserum, had minimal effects on platelet aggregation ex vivo, but significantly reduced platelet accumulation in the ischemic myocardium following 5-h reperfusion and abolished the transmural platelet distribution. These results suggest that myocardial platelet deposition is secondary to a neutrophil-mediated event in this occlusion-reperfusion model of myocardial injury. Interactions between platelets and neutrophils at the site of tissue damage may influence the process of myocardial ischemic injury.
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