| Literature DB >> 33004892 |
P Piñon-Esteban1, L Núñez2, R Moure3, G M Marrón-Liñares2, X Flores-Rios4, G Aldama-Lopez4, J Salgado-Fernandez4, R Calviño-Santos4,5, F Rebollal-Leal4, R Pan-Lizcano2, N Vazquez-Gonzalez4,5, G Bou3, M Tomás3, M Hermida-Prieto2, J M Vazquez-Rodriguez4,5.
Abstract
Infectious agents have been suggested to be involved in etiopathogenesis of Acute Coronary Syndrome (ACS). However, the relationship between bacterial infection and acute myocardial infarction (AMI) has not yet been completely clarified. The objective of this study is to detect bacterial DNA in thrombotic material of patients with ACS with ST-segment elevation (STEMI) treated with Primary Percutaneous Coronary Intervention (PPCI). We studied 109 consecutive patients with STEMI, who underwent thrombus aspiration and arterial peripheral blood sampling. Testing for bacterial DNA was performed by probe-based real-time Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR). 12 probes and primers were used for the detection of Aggregatibacter actinomycetemcomitans, Chlamydia pneumoniae, viridans group streptococci, Porphyromonas gingivalis, Fusobacterium nucleatum, Tannarella forsythia, Treponema denticola, Helycobacter pylori, Mycoplasma pneumoniae, Staphylococus aureus, Prevotella intermedia and Streptococcus mutans. Thus, DNA of four species of bacteria was detected in 10 of the 109 patients studied. The most frequent species was viridans group streptococci (6 patients, 5.5%), followed by Staphylococus aureus (2 patients, 1.8%). Moreover, a patient had DNA of Porphyromonas gingivalis (0.9%); and another patient had DNA of Prevotella intermedia (0.9%). Bacterial DNA was not detected in peripheral blood of any of our patients. In conclusion, DNA of four species of endodontic and periodontal bacteria was detected in thrombotic material of 10 STEMI patients. Bacterial DNA was not detected in the peripheral blood of patients with bacterial DNA in their thrombotic material. Bacteria could be latently present in plaques and might play a role in plaque instability and thrombus formation leading to ACS.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 33004892 PMCID: PMC7530676 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-73011-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Species specific primers and probes to detect ADN from different bacterias.
| Oral pathogens | Not oral pathogens |
|---|---|
Fw: TCCGTAAACAATTGGACGAA Rv: CACGTTGGATACCACGAAGA Probe: 67 UPS | Fw: CCAATGGTAAATTAGTTCCTGGTG Rv: GGTCTGTCGCCAACATTTTT Probe: 155 UPS |
Fw: GGGTTCTAAGCGCCACATT Rv: CGAACTAGTACTGTTGTGGCTAGG Probe: 59 UPS | Fw: CGTTGGCTACGAAAGATTCAG Rv: GGGTAAAGAATAACGAGCACCA Probe: 67 UPS |
Fw: CCTTTTGTAGACTCTTCGTCAAATTC Rv: CATCACGCTGATGTTGTTGA Probe: 49 UPS | Fw: GCAGCTAATGTCCGTAGTGCT Rv: GTGGTGAGCATGACCAGGTT Probe: 150 UPS |
Fw: ATAGTAGCGTGTCCGGCTTC Rv: ATCGTAGGCGGATTGGAGA Probe: 82 UPS | |
Fw: TCCCAGCAAATGTTGGAAG Rv: TTCATCATCAAATTCGTCATAGTCT Probe: 143 UPS | |
Fw: GCAGATATACAGGTAGACATAGGAAGC Rv: GCTCTTCTAAGTCCTGTTCAGTGTT Probe: 128 UPS | |
Fw: TGGTATCAAAATCAGCAAGGAA Rv: CGTCTTCGCGCATATTCAG Probe: 126 UPS | |
Fw: AAACATCGTGGATACCCTCCT Rv: ATCAAAGTGGTCGGTGTCG Probe: 70 UPS | |
Fw: CAATACTACGGTGGTGCAGTATCT Rv: ATATTGTTGGCGCGTAATGC Probe: 67 UPS | |
Fw: CAAATAAAGGACAGTGCAGAAATC Rv: CTCCTTCTGCCCTTCTAGGC Probe: 144 UPS | |
Fw forward, Rv reverse, UPS universal probe library.
Baseline Characteristics of study population.
| Baseline characteristics | N = 109 |
|---|---|
| Age (years mean ± SD) | 61.4 ± 14.1 |
| Male (%) | 83 (76.1%) |
| Smokers (%) | 41 (37.6%) |
| Hypertension (%) | 47 (43%) |
| Dyslipidaemia (%) | 36 (33%) |
| Diabetes mellitus (%) | 14 (12.8%) |
| Prior MI (%) | 6 (5.5%) |
| Anterior MI (%) | 38 (35%) |
| Inferior MI (%) | 52 (47.7%) |
| Radial access (%) | 93 (85%) |
| Multivessel disease | 39 (35.7%) |
| LAD (%) | 46% |
| LCx (%) | 12% |
| RCA (%) | 39% |
| Success procedure (TIMI III) | 94% |
MI myocardial infarction, LAD left anterior descending artery, LCx left circumflex, RCA right coronary artery, SD Standard Deviation
Differences between DNA ( +) and DNA (-) groups.
| Baseline characteristics | No bacterial DNA in thrombotic material | Bacterial DNA in thrombotic material | |
|---|---|---|---|
| n = 99 | n = 10 | ||
| Age (years mean ± SD) | 61.4 ± 14.2 | 61.6 ± 13.0 | 0.97 |
| Male (%) | 75 (75.8%) | 8 (80.0%) | 0.55 |
| Smokers (%) | 37 (37.4%) | 4 (40.0%) | 0.56 |
| Hypertension (%) | 43 (43.4%) | 4 (40.0%) | 0.55 |
| Dyslipidaemia (%) | 34 (34.3%) | 2 (20.0%) | 0.29 |
| Diabetes mellitus (%) | 11 (11.1%) | 3 (30.0%) | 0.11 |
| Prior MI (%) | 5 (5.1%) | 1 (10%) | 0.44 |
| Anterior MI (%) | 45 (48%) | 4 (40%) | 1.0 |
| Inferior MI (%) | 48 (52%) | 4 (40%) | 1.0 |
| Radial access (%) | 86 (86.9%) | 7 (70%) | 0.16 |
| Multivessel disease | 39 (36.4%) | 4 (40%) | 0.53 |
| LAD (%) | 47 (47%) | 4(40%) | 0.74 |
| LCx (%) | 12 (12.1%) | 1 (10%) | 1.0 |
| RCA (%) | 38 (38%) | 5 (50%) | 0.512 |
| 92 (93%) | 9 (90%) | 0.50 | |
Associations between the presence of bacterial DNA (positivity/negativity) in the sample and clinical and angiographic parameters were calculated using Fisher’s exact test. Mann–Whitney U Test was used for comparison of non-parametric numerical variables. A value of p < 0.05 was considered statistically significant.
MI myocardial infarction, LAD left anterior descending artery, LCx left circumflex, RCA right coronary artery.