Low-Dose Aspirin, Coxibs, and other NSAIDS: A Clinical Mosaic Emerges

  Figure 1.
Figure 1.

Assessing the relationship between inhibition of platelet COX-1 activity and thromboxane biosynthesis in man. In human platelets (left), the maximal capacity for COX-dependent prostanoid synthesis ex vivo (here, measured as TXB2 produced during whole blood clotting) is three orders of magnitude greater than the basal in vivo biosynthetic rate of thromboxane (middle panel, calculated according to excretion of liver-metabolized products in urine; designated as 11-dehydro-TXB2 & other metabolites). Following aspirin administration, the relationship between inhibition of platelet cyclooxygenase activity measured ex vivo (serum TXB2), and inhibition of thromboxane biosynthesis in vivo (urinary 11-dehydro-TXB2) is non-linear, with substantial inhibition of the latter only occurring at complete suppression of the former (right panel). [ See (8, 10) and references therein.]

This Article

  1. MI February 2009 vol. 9 no. 1 31-39