Background: There is still worldwide disagreement about the optimal lowest dose of aspirin to be used in patients after a transient ischemic attack (TIA) or nondisabling stroke. We measured the urinary 11-dehydro-thromboxane-B(2) (uTXB(2)) excretion to compare the degree of suppression of in vivo platelet activation by various low doses of aspirin.
Methods: 60 patients were randomly allocated to treatment with either 30, 50, 75 or 325 mg of aspirin. All patients received a 413-mg loading dose of carbasalate calcium (equivalent to 325 mg of aspirin) on day 0. The study population was stratified into a subgroup with acute ischemic stroke (AIS; n = 20; onset of symptoms <48 h) and a subgroup with a recent TIA or minor stroke (TIA/mS; n = 40) with onset of symptoms beyond 30 days, but less than a year previously. Urine samples were collected on day 0, 1, 5, 11 and 28 in patients with AIS, and on day 0, 11 and 28 in the patients with a TIA/mS.
Results: On day 28, mean uTXB(2) levels were 241, 130, 217 and 187 pmol/mmol creatinine in the four treatment groups (ANOVA, p = 0.43). In the AIS subgroup, uTXB(2) remained suppressed on days 5 and 11 in all except the patients with the lowest dose (mean uTXB(2) on days 5 and 11: 475 and 392 pmol/mmol creatinine; log-transformed ANOVA, p = 0.05).
Conclusion: In patients with a TIA or nondisabling stroke, a daily dose of 30 mg of aspirin provides sufficient suppression of thromboxane synthesis. No indication of a dose-effect relationship was found. However, whether such a low dose adequately suppresses thromboxane synthesis in patients with acute stroke is uncertain.
Copyright 2004 S. Karger AG, Basel