Abstract
Reports of circulating platelet aggregates (ie, microemboli) in thromboembolism and other vascular disorders are based on a method (Wu and Hoak , 1974) in which venous blood is collected via scalp vein needle and tubing into either formaldehyde, which fixes aggregates, or EDTA, which disperses them. The ratio of platelet counts in platelet- rich plasma (PRP) from the two blood samples after centrifugation is interpreted as a measure of platelet aggregates in the circulation in vivo. We compared this standard Wu and Hoak technique with a modified one, in which blood was drawn directly into a syringe, and with a third method that avoided centrifugation by counting single platelets in whole blood. Both modified techniques could detect aggregates generated in vitro with adenosine diphosphate (ADP). In 12 normal subjects, the three methods were equivalent, but in 37 patients with thromboembolic disorders, the standard Wu and Hoak method gave a lower ratio than the other methods. Similar results were found in a subset of eight patients with myocardial infarction. Heparin treatment of patients did not influence the results. The data suggest that formation of platelet aggregates occurred during venipuncture. Platelets may be hyperactive in patients with thromboembolic disease and may form aggregates in vitro during collection, but the concept of chronic microembolism in such patients should be reassessed.