Abstract
Although platelets can contribute to atherosclerosis and its thromboembolic complications in the nondiabetic population, the role of platelets in enhanced vascular disease in the diabetic population remains unclear. Most studies indicate that platelet function in vitro is enhanced in platelets from people and animals with diabetes, and the mechanisms are being identified. There remains some controversy about whether platelet changes occur before, and therefore could contribute to, vascular complications or whether they are secondary to vascular disease. It is possible that only intervention trials to determine if inhibiting platelet function limits the progression of vascular disease in diabetic patients will definitively answer this question. The earlier premise that enhanced activity of the arachidonate pathway is responsible for the hypersensitivity of platelets from diabetic humans needs to be modified to recognize that additional mechanisms are involved in platelet activation and are modified in people with diabetes and also that altered activity of the arachidonate pathway may reflect changes in earlier pathways involved in platelet activation. Clearly, alterations in these nonarachidonate pathways need to be taken into account when considering the appropriate antiplatelet agents to use in intervention trials. Information about whether hypersensitivity of platelets from people with diabetes persists in vivo and, if so, how this influences platelet-vessel wall interactions and thrombotic tendencies needs to be pursued more intensely in suitable animal models so that the theories developed from studies in vitro can be tested in the more complex environment in vivo. These are important areas for research in the future.