| Literature DB >> 21152191 |
Antonella Tufano1, Claudia Arturo, Ernesto Cimino, Matteo Nicola Dario Di Minno, Mirko Di Capua, Anna Maria Cerbone, Giovanni Di Minno.
Abstract
Vascular glycosaminoglycans (GAG) are essential components of the endothelium and vessel wall and have been shown to be involved in several biologic functions. Mesoglycan, a natural GAG preparation, is a polysaccharide complex rich in sulphur radicals with strong negative electric charge. It is extracted from porcine intestinal mucosa and is composed of heparan sulfate, dermatan sulfate, electrophoretically slow-moving heparin, and variable and minimal quantities of chondroitin sulfate. Data on antithrombotic and profibrinolytic activities of the drug show that mesoglycan, although not indicated in the treatment of acute arterial or venous thrombosis because of the low antithrombotic effect, may be useful in the management of vascular diseases, when combined with antithrombotics in the case of disease of cerebral vasculature, and with antithrombotics and vasodilator drugs in the case of chronic peripheral arterial disease. The protective effect of mesoglycan in patients with venous thrombosis and the absence of side effects, support the use of GAG in patients with chronic venous insufficiency and persistent venous ulcers, in association with compression therapy (zinc bandages, multiple layer bandages, etc.), elastic compression stockings, and local care, and in the prevention of recurrences in patients with previous DVT following the standard course of oral anticoagulation treatment.Entities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 21152191 PMCID: PMC2989756 DOI: 10.1155/2010/390643
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Vasc Med ISSN: 2090-2824
Mesoglycan in ischemic stroke. Clinical studies.
| Author | Study design | Pathology | Patients ( | Doses/route | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Orefice [ | Prospective | Stroke | 30 | Mesoglycan 50 mg twice daily orally for 3 months | Mesoglycan: safe and effective in reducing FBR without interfering with other coagulative parameters |
| Orefice [ | Randomized Controlled | Stroke | 46 | Mesoglycan 50 mg twice daily orally versus Ticlopidine 250 mg twice daily, for 2 months | Mesoglycan and ticlopidine: both safe and effective in reducing FBR without interfering with other coagulative parameters |
| Vecchio [ | Prospective | Stroke | 20 | Mesoglycan 30 mg twice daily intramuscular, for 15 days | Mesoglycan: significant reduction in FBR, cholesterol, triglycerides, improved erythrocyte filterability without interfering with other coagulative parameters |
| Mansi [ | Prospective | TIA or stroke (within 3 mo) | 30 | Mesoglycan 50 mg twice daily orally | Mesoglycan decreases neurologic deficits |
| Forconi [ | Multicenter clinical trial | History of stroke, TIA, RIND or minor stroke | 1,398 | Mesoglycan 30 mg twice daily i.m., then 100 mg daily orally, versus ASA 300 mg daily | No differences. ASA: higher incidence of side effects |
Mesoglycan in peripheral obstructive arterial disease (POAD). Clinical studies.
| Author | Study design | Pathology | Patients ( | Doses/route | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Andreozzi [ | Prospective | POAD in stages I-II Fontaine | 10 | Mesoglycan 60 mg daily | Mesoglycan: safe and effective in improving the wall response to vasodilator stimulus |
| Raso [ | Prospective | POAD stage IIb Fontaine | 36 | Mesoglycan 60 mg daily endovenous for 10 days then 100 mg daily orally for 20 days, repeated for two months then oral mesoglycan for 12 months | Mesoglycan: significant improvement of symptoms and signs in all patients but one |
| Nenci [ | Randomized, double-blinded | PAOD stage II Fontaine | 242 | Mesoglycan 30 mg daily i.m. for 3 weeks then 100 mg daily orally for two weeks, versus matching placebo All patients receive ASA | Mesoglycan: significant clinical improvement versus placebo. Significant improvement in quality of life scores. |
Mesoglycan and venous disease.
| Author | Study design | Pathology | Patients ( | Doses/route | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Arosio [ | Randomized | Chronic venous ulcers | 183 | Mesoglycan 30 mg daily i.m. for 3 weeks then 100 mg daily orally, versus placebo, for 24 ± 1 weeks | Mesoglycan: significant difference in the rate of ulcer healing versus placebo |
| Andreozzi [ | Retrospective analysis | Patients with previous DVT | 36 | Mesoglycan 50 mg twice daily orally | Mesoglycan: effective in preventing thrombotic recurrences |
| Viliani [ | Randomized | Mechanical oedema (MO) | 44 | FKT+Mesoglycan 30 mg twice daily orally versus FKT alone | Mesoglycan: significant clinical improvement in objective and subjective parameters |
| Prandoni [ | Randomized | DVT venographically proved | 90 | Heparin and then oral anticoagulation (12 weeks), then mesoglycan 72 mg daily orally versus placebo, for 1 year | Recurrences of DVT and/or PE less frequent with mesoglycan versus placebo (nonsignificant difference) |