Literature DB >> 19782267

Intravenous administration of adenosine triphosphate disodium during primary percutaneous coronary intervention attenuates the transient rapid improvement of myocardial wall motion, not myocardial stunning, shortly after recanalization in acute anterior myocardial infarction.

Takehito Tokuyama1, Tadamichi Sakuma, Chikaaki Motoda, Tomoharu Kawase, Ryou Takeda, Shinji Mito, Hiromichi Tamekiyo, Masaya Otsuka, Tomokazu Okimoto, Mamoru Toyofuku, Hidekazu Hirao, Yuji Muraoka, Hironori Ueda, Yoshiko Masaoka, Yasuhiko Hayashi.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND
PURPOSE: Administration of adenosine attenuates myocardial stunning after reperfusion in a canine experimental ischemic model. However, it is unknown whether administration of adenosine triphosphate disodium (ATP) during reperfusion can attenuate myocardial stunning after coronary recanalization in patients with acute myocardial infarction (MI). Therefore, we sought to elucidate the effects of ATP administration on serial changes of left ventricular systolic function before and after coronary recanalization.
METHODS: In 27 patients with first ST-elevation acute anterior MI, in whom primary percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) was completed within 10 h after symptom onset, ATP at a mean rate of 103 microg/kg/min (n=16) or normal saline (n=11) was intravenously administered for 1 h during reperfusion. Left ventricular regional wall motion within the initially severely ischemic region was serially analyzed using the standard wall motion score index (WMSI) by transthoracic echocardiography.
RESULTS: Means of WMSIs were similar shortly before primary PCI in both groups (2.79 in ATP group and 2.69 in controls). They changed to 2.56 and 2.22 shortly after PCI, 2.49 and 2.39 on day 2, 2.34 and 2.30 on day 3, 2.19 and 2.25 on day 10, and 1.85 and 2.02, 6 months later, respectively. Transient improved regional wall motion within the initially severely ischemic region was observed shortly after PCI in controls (10.3% of observed segments); however, it was significantly suppressed in the ATP group (2.55%). The percent recovery of WMSI on day 10, which was defined as WMSI on day 10 normalized by improvement of WMSI for 6 months, was 63.8% in ATP group and 65.7% in controls, implying ATP administration could not reduce myocardial stunning by day 10 after primary PCI.
CONCLUSIONS: The high-dose administration of ATP during primary PCI prevented transient improved wall motion shortly after coronary recanalization rather than preventing left ventricular stunning. These results suggest that ATP can prevent reperfusion injury during primary PCI.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2009        PMID: 19782267     DOI: 10.1016/j.jjcc.2009.06.002

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Cardiol        ISSN: 0914-5087            Impact factor:   3.159


  4 in total

Review 1.  Cardiac purinergic signalling in health and disease.

Authors:  Geoffrey Burnstock; Amir Pelleg
Journal:  Purinergic Signal       Date:  2014-12-20       Impact factor: 3.765

2.  Lower Level of Low Density Lipoprotein Cholesterol is Associated with a Higher Increase in the Fractional Flow Reserve in Patients with Fixed-dose Rosuvastatin.

Authors:  Takehiro Hashikata; Taiki Tojo; Yusuke Muramatsu; Toshimitsu Sato; Ryota Kakizaki; Teruyoshi Nemoto; Kazuhiro Fujiyoshi; Sayaka Namba; Lisa Kitasato; Takuya Hashimoto; Ryo Kameda; Takao Shimohama; Minako Yamaoka-Tojo; Junya Ako
Journal:  J Atheroscler Thromb       Date:  2017-08-19       Impact factor: 4.928

3.  Comprehensive analysis of the cardiac proteome in a rat model of myocardial ischemia-reperfusion using a TMT-based quantitative proteomic strategy.

Authors:  Sun Ha Lim; Jongwon Lee; Mee-Jung Han
Journal:  Proteome Sci       Date:  2020-03-06       Impact factor: 2.480

4.  The structural basis of ATP as an allosteric modulator.

Authors:  Shaoyong Lu; Wenkang Huang; Qi Wang; Qiancheng Shen; Shuai Li; Ruth Nussinov; Jian Zhang
Journal:  PLoS Comput Biol       Date:  2014-09-11       Impact factor: 4.475

  4 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.