BACKGROUND: A great number of HIV-infected patients using antiretroviral drugs develop endothelial dysfunction and atherothrombosis, which lead to a high medical and social burden. Thus, it is important to identify pathophysiological mechanisms involved with the endothelial function in these patients, so that early intervention can be made to avoid disease progression. OBJECTIVE: To evaluate endothelial function using endothelium-dependent and independent vasodilation in HIV-positive patients and in a control group. METHODS: A total of 27 HIV-positive patients and 16 controls were evaluated. Endothelium-dependent (reactive hyperemia) and independent (SL nitroglycerine) vasodilation of the brachial artery was used to evaluate the endothelial function. RESULTS: HIV-positive patients receiving protease inhibitors (PI) showed significantly lower endothelium-independent vasodilation than the HIV-negative (p=0.020) and HIV-positive without PI (p=0.034) subgroups. The change in brachial artery diameter during active hyperemia was not statistically significant in any subgroup. Multiple linear regression analysis showed that only PI was associated with the relative delta of brachial reactivity to vasodilator in HIV-positive patients at 60s and 90s. CONCLUSION: HIV-positive patients receiving PI presented endothelium-independent dysfunction when compared to HIV-positive patients not receiving PI and to the control group.
BACKGROUND: A great number of HIV-infectedpatients using antiretroviral drugs develop endothelial dysfunction and atherothrombosis, which lead to a high medical and social burden. Thus, it is important to identify pathophysiological mechanisms involved with the endothelial function in these patients, so that early intervention can be made to avoid disease progression. OBJECTIVE: To evaluate endothelial function using endothelium-dependent and independent vasodilation in HIV-positivepatients and in a control group. METHODS: A total of 27 HIV-positivepatients and 16 controls were evaluated. Endothelium-dependent (reactive hyperemia) and independent (SL nitroglycerine) vasodilation of the brachial artery was used to evaluate the endothelial function. RESULTS:HIV-positivepatients receiving protease inhibitors (PI) showed significantly lower endothelium-independent vasodilation than the HIV-negative (p=0.020) and HIV-positive without PI (p=0.034) subgroups. The change in brachial artery diameter during active hyperemia was not statistically significant in any subgroup. Multiple linear regression analysis showed that only PI was associated with the relative delta of brachial reactivity to vasodilator in HIV-positivepatients at 60s and 90s. CONCLUSION:HIV-positivepatients receiving PI presented endothelium-independent dysfunction when compared to HIV-positivepatients not receiving PI and to the control group.
Authors: F Arnaiz de Las Revillas; J A Parra; C Armiñanzas; C Fariñas-Alvarez; V Gonzalez-Quintanilla; E Palacios; C Gonzalez-Rico; M Gutiérrez-Cuadra; A Oterino; M C Fariñas Journal: Sci Rep Date: 2021-09-16 Impact factor: 4.379