Individualized anticoagulation management and improvement of the safety and effectiveness of oral anticoagulant have always been the focus of clinicians' attention. D‐dimer, a sensitive marker of thrombosis and coagulation activation, is not only traditionally used in the diagnosis of venous thromboembolism, acute aortic dissection, and disseminated intravascular coagulation but can also be used as a helpful marker in the management of oral anticoagulant, including evaluating the anticoagulation quality, predicting clinical outcomes, and determining the optimal duration and intensity of anticoagulation.
Mechanical heart valve replacement (MHVR) entails lifetime oral anticoagulation to eliminate thrombosis. However, adverse events may still occur despite proper anticoagulation therapy. In this study, we investigated whether D-dimer can predict the clinical events in post-MHVR patients during oral anticoagulation therapy. This was a single-center, prospective study. In all, 772 patients who underwent MHVR in the Wuhan Asia Heart Hospital from January 2013 to May 2014 were screened. Patients were assigned to the abnormal D-dimer group and the normal D-dimer group according to the D-dimer levels measured 3 months after the beginning of the oral anticoagulation therapy regime. All patients were followed up for 24 months or until the observation of the endpoints, which included thrombotic events, bleeding events, and all-cause deaths. A total of 718 patients were included in the analysis: 91 had abnormal D-dimer levels, and 627 had normal D-dimer levels. In all, 53 events were observed during 24 months. Compared with the normal D-dimer group, patients with abnormal D-dimer levels had a higher incidence of thrombotic events (10 versus 14; hazard
It has been reported that inappropriate acute thrombus formation is the pathophysiological substrate underlying increased risk and severity of target organ damage in hypertension (HTN). However, the relationship between severity of HTN and D-dimer has not been well characterized. The study was aimed to assess plasma D-dimer level and its correlation with disease severity among hypertensives. A comparative cross-sectional study was conducted at Wuhan Asia Heart Hospital among 100 participants (60 hypertensives and 40 controls). The correlation between variables were determined using correlation coefficients, regression analysis, and also using different parametric and nonparametric tests. We observed higher D-dimer levels among hypertensives compared to the healthy controls (P < .001). The D-dimer levels were found to be increased significantly with the severity of HTN (P < .001). D-dimer was found to have a diagnostic power of 86.9% in differentiating complicated from uncomplicated HTN at 0.83 mg/L cutoff value. This study suggests that D-dimer level was higher among hypertensives than control groups and it was also increasing significantly with the severity of HTN. This suggests that hypercoagulability of fibrin plays a role in the occurrence of thromboembolic complications of hypertensive patients.Abbreviations: AUC = area under the curve, BMI = body mass index, BP = blood pressure, CHD = coronary heart disease, CI = confidence interval, CVD = cardiovascular disease, DBP = diastolic blood pressure, D-DI = D-dimer, HTN = hypertension, PAD = peripheral arterial disease, ROC = receiver operating characteristic, SBP = systolic blood pressure, TOD = target organ damage.
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