Aspirin, clopidogrel… The difference between 5 antiplatelet drugs in one article!

*For medical professionals only

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Antiplatelet drugs are widely used in the treatment of coronary heart disease, stroke and peripheral artery disease. Aspirin, clopidogrel, ticagrelor, sarpogrelate, and ozagrel are commonly used clinical antiplatelet drugs. What is the difference between these five drugs?

I. The process of platelet thrombosis

1. Platelet adhesion

Under normal circumstances, prostacyclin (PGI2) produced by vascular endothelial cells can relax blood vessels and inhibit platelet aggregation.

When vascular endothelial cells are damaged, PGI2 production is reduced, and platelets can adhere to subendothelial tissue [collagen, von Willebrand factor (vWF), etc.].

Hypertension, hyperlipidemia, hyperglycemia, hyperhomocysteine, etc., can all cause vascular endothelial damage.

Note: Thromboxane A2 (TXA2), Serotonin (5-HT), Adenosine Diphosphate (ADP)

2. Platelet aggregation

The adhesion of platelets to platelets is called “platelet aggregation.”

Under normal circumstances, the platelet membrane sugar monoprotein complex (GPIIb/IIIa) on the platelet membrane cannot bind to fibrinogen.

When GPIIb/IIIa is activated, it can combine with fibrinogen and connect with adjacent platelets through fibrinogen, so that platelets aggregate and form early thrombus.

ADP, 5-HT and TXA2 are the common pathways of platelet aggregation that activate GPIIb/IIIa.

3. Vasoconstriction

Platelets adhering to the injury release vasoconstrictor substances such as 5-HT and TXA2, which can cause vasoconstriction and facilitate thrombosis.

Second, the mechanism of action of commonly used antiplatelet drugs

1, TXA2 synthesis inhibitor

TXA2 promotes platelet aggregation.

Aspirin irreversibly inhibits cyclooxygenase (COX-1), and indobufen reversibly inhibits COX-1.

2. Cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP) degradation inhibitor

cAMP inhibits platelet aggregation and dilates blood vessels.

Cilostazol inhibits phosphodiesterase III, inhibits the degradation of cAMP, increases the concentration of cAMP in platelets, inhibits platelet aggregation, and dilates blood vessels.

3. GPⅡb/Ⅲa receptor antagonists

Tirofiban and eptifibatide directly prevent the binding of GPIIb/IIIa to fibrinogen and inhibit platelet aggregation.

4. ADP receptor antagonists

ADP can indirectly activate GPIIb/IIIa after binding to P2Y12 receptor.

The active metabolite of clopidogrel irreversibly inhibits P2Y12 receptor andADP binding, ticagrelor and its active metabolite reversibly inhibit P2Y12 receptor binding to ADP.

5,5-HT receptor antagonists

Sapogrelate inhibits 5-HT-induced vascular smooth muscle contraction and platelet aggregation.

III. Clinical application

Cilostazol: Phosphodiesterase III inhibitor, inhibits cAMP degradation, inhibits platelet aggregation and dilates blood vessels.

Sapogrelate: 5-HT receptor antagonist, inhibits platelet aggregation and dilates blood vessels.

Cilostazol and sarpogrelate can be used to improve ischemic symptoms such as ulcers, pain and coldness caused by chronic arterial occlusive disease.

Source of this article: Center for Drug Evaluation

This article was written by Gcplive

Editor in charge: Yuan Xueqing, Zhang Li

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