Antiplatelet agents are drugs that inhibit enzymes or receptors required for platelet activation, platelet aggregation, and/or thrombus
Antiplatelet agents are drugs that inhibit enzymes or receptors required for platelet activation, platelet aggregation, and/or thrombus
Antiplatelet drugs are primarily directed against platelets and inhibit platelet activation by a number of different mechanisms.
Drugs causing predictable platelet inhibition: Aspirin Aspirin irreversibly acetylates platelet cyclooxygenase COX), thereby inhibiting the synthesis of thromboxane A2 (TxA2), which plays an
Antiplatelet agents are drugs that inhibit enzymes or receptors required for platelet activation, platelet aggregation, and/or thrombus
The most commonly used drug that inhibits platelet function is aspirin, which inhibits cyclooxygenase I (COX-1) conversion of arachidonic acid to thromboxane A 2, inhibiting platelet function by preventing the enhancement and propagation of agonist-induced platelet signaling. Additional drugs that inhibit platelet COX-1 include nonspecific
Antiplatelet drugs can reversibly or irreversibly inhibit process involved in platelet activation resulting in decreased tendency of platelet
Antiplatelet drugs are primarily directed against platelets and inhibit platelet activation by a number of different mechanisms.
Mechanism: Possibly via inhibition of serotonin-mediated platelet activation (inhibition of the serotonin reuptake transporter) and subsequent platelet
Comments
That pill you're referring to is there, as are inhibiting injections. But blokes are squeamish, so tend to get into an uproar once someone puts a bit of a squeeze on their bollocks.