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Effect of enteric coating on antiplatelet activity of low-dose as.pdf (243.81 kB)

Effect of enteric coating on antiplatelet activity of low-dose aspirin in healthy volunteers.

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Version 2 2021-12-17, 17:00
Version 1 2019-11-22, 16:14
journal contribution
posted on 2019-11-22, 16:14 authored by Dermot Cox, Andrew O. Maree, Michelle Dooley, Ronán Conroy, Michael F. Byrne, Desmond J. Fitzgerald

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Aspirin resistance may be relatively common and associated with adverse outcome. Meta-analysis has clearly shown that 75 mg plain aspirin is the lowest effective dose; however, it is not known whether the recent increased use of enteric-coated aspirin could account for aspirin resistance. This study was designed to determine whether enteric-coated aspirin is as effective as plain aspirin in healthy volunteers. METHODS: Seventy-one healthy volunteers were enrolled in 3 separate bioequivalence studies. Using a crossover design, each volunteer took 2 different aspirin preparations. Five aspirin preparations were evaluated, 3 different enteric-coated 75-mg aspirins, dispersible aspirin 75 mg and asasantin (25-mg standard release aspirin plus 200-mg modified-release dipyridamole given twice daily). Serum thromboxane (TX) B2 levels and arachidonic acid-induced platelet aggregation were measured before and after 14 days of treatment. RESULTS: All other aspirin preparations tested were inferior to dispersible aspirin (P99%) inhibition (P

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This article is available at http://stroke.ahajournals.org

Published Citation

Cox D, Maree AO, Dooley M, Conroy R, Byrne MF, Fitzgerald DJ. Effect of enteric coating on antiplatelet activity of low-dose aspirin in healthy volunteers. Stroke 2006;37(8):2153-8

Publication Date

2006-08-01

Publisher

Lippincott Williams & Wilkins

PubMed ID

16794200