Literature DB >> 17823365

Inflammatory activation during coronary artery surgery and its dose-dependent modulation by statin/ACE-inhibitor combination.

Alberto Radaelli1, Claudia Loardi, Maria Cazzaniga, Giulia Balestri, Caterina DeCarlini, M Grazia Cerrito, Elena Negro Cusa, Luca Guerra, Stefano Garducci, Danilo Santo, Lorenzo Menicanti, Giovanni Paolini, Arianna Azzellino, Maria Luisa Lavitrano, Giuseppe Mancia, Alberto U Ferrari.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: On-pump coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) surgery triggers an inflammatory response (IR) which may impair revascularization. The study aimed at (1) characterizing the temporal profile of the IR by assaying appropriate markers in both systemic and coronary blood, and (2) determining whether (and which doses of) cardiovascular drugs known to have antiinflammatory properties, namely statins and ACE-inhibitors (ACEI), inhibit the response. METHODS AND
RESULTS: Patients scheduled for CABG (n=22) were randomized to statin/ACEI combination treatment at standard doses (STD, ramipril 2.5/simvastatin 20 mg, or atorvastatin 10 mg), or at high doses (HiDo, ramipril 10 mg, or enalapril 20 mg/simvastatin 80 mg, or atorvastatin 40 mg). Plasma levels of interleukin 6, tumor necrosis factor alpha, E-selectin, von Willebrand factor (vWF), and sVCAM-1 were serially assayed (ELISA) before, during, and after CABG. Blood was drawn from an artery, a systemic vein, and the coronary sinus. Myocardial perfusion scans were obtained before and 2 months after surgery in 19 out of 22 subjects. In the STD group both IL-6 and TNF displayed striking increases which were similar at all sites and peaked 10 to 60 minutes after aortic declamping. Such increases were drastically attenuated in the HiDo group. Instead, only modest increases in venous E-selectin, vWF, and sVCAM-1 were observed. Scintigraphic ischemia scores were entirely normalized after versus before CABG in the HiDo but not in the STD treatment group.
CONCLUSIONS: On-pump CABG surgery is associated with an intense systemic inflammatory response, which can be almost completely prevented by early treatment with high (but not standard) doses of ACE-inhibitors and statins.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17823365     DOI: 10.1161/ATVBAHA.107.149039

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Arterioscler Thromb Vasc Biol        ISSN: 1079-5642            Impact factor:   8.311


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