| Literature DB >> 26122487 |
C Corinaldesi1, L Di Luigi1, A Lenzi2, C Crescioli3.
Abstract
PDE5 inhibitors (PDE5i) are widely known as treatment for erectile dysfunction (ED). This favorable action has emerged as a "side effect" from pioneering studies when PDE5i have been originally proposed as treatment for coronary artery disease (CAD). PDE5i showed marginal benefits for CAD treatment; although disappointing for that indication, they improved systemic and pulmonary vasodilation and ameliorated general endothelial function. Therefore, PDE5i have been approved and licensed also for pulmonary artery hypertension (PAH), besides ED. Nowadays, fine-tuned biomolecular mechanisms of PDE5i are well recognized to be beneficial onto myocardial contractility and geometry, to reduce tissue fibrosis, hypertrophy and apoptosis. PDE5i consistently exert benefits on heart failure, infarct, cardiomyopathy. The concept that PDE5i likely blunt Th1-driven inflammatory processes, which shift the homeostatic balance from health to disease, has emerged; PDE5i seem to decrease the release of active biomolecules from cells to tissues interested by inflammation. In this view, following clinical and basic research progresses, PDE5i can be undoubtedly "re-allocated" for cardiac indications and, hopefully, they could be approved as therapeutic tools to treat and prevent heart disease. This review aims to summarize PDE5i different clinical applications, from past to present and future, focusing on their potential power as treatment for cardiac diseases.Entities:
Keywords: Cardioprotection; Inflammation; PDE5 inhibitors
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26122487 PMCID: PMC4712255 DOI: 10.1007/s40618-015-0340-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Endocrinol Invest ISSN: 0391-4097 Impact factor: 4.256
Tissue and cell distribution of PDE5. Potential clinical applications of PDE5i are depicted
| Tissue distribution/cell expression | Potential application of PDE5i |
|---|---|
| Heart/cardiomyocytes [ | Cardiac dysfunction (heart failure, ischemia/reperfusion injuries, infarct, ventricular arrhythmias, cardiopulmonary bypass) |
| Penis [ | Erectile dysfunction |
| Vagina/vessel smooth muscle, endothelial and epithelial cells [ | Female sexual dysfunction |
| Uterus/myometrial cells [ | Preterm labor |
| Brain/purkinje cells [ | Psychiatric and neurodegenerative disorders |
| Prostate/endothelial and smooth muscle cells [ | Lower urinary tract symptoms |
| Urethra/ureteral smooth muscle [ | Ureteral colic |
| Bladder [ | Overactive bladder symptoms |
| Lung/pulmonary arteries, vascular smooth muscle cells [ | Pulmonary arterial hypertension |
| Platelets [ | Anti-platelet agents/inhibition of platelet aggregation |
| Retina/endothelial and smooth muscle cells of retina and choroids vessels, ganglion and bipolar cells [ | Regulation of ocular blood flow/retinal ischemic disease |