Literature DB >> 7748481

Ischemic heart disease and antioxidants: mechanistic aspects of oxidative injury and its prevention.

D R Janero1.   

Abstract

The disease state of myocardial ischemia results from a hypoperfusion-induced insufficiency of heart-muscle oxidative metabolism due to inadequate coronary circulation. Myocardial ischemia is an important, lifespan-limiting medical problem and a major economic health-care concern. Reperfusion, although avidly pursued in the clinic as essential to the ultimate survival of acutely ischemic heart muscle, may itself carry an injury component. Cardiac reperfusion injury appears to reflect, at least in part, an oxidant burden established upon reoxygenation of ischemic myocardium. Laboratory evidence demonstrates that oxidative stress to the heart-muscle cell (cardiomyocyte) can elicit the three known types of ischemia-reperfusion injury that directly affect the myocardium: arrhythmia, stunning, and infarction. The limited clinical occurrence of serious reperfusion arrhythmias has restricted the importance of antioxidants as antiarrhythmic agents against this form of myocardial ischemia-reperfusion damage. Despite the utmost clinical significance of lethal cardiomyocyte injury as a negative prognostic indicator for the ischemic heart-disease patient, inconsistent results of antioxidant interventions in reducing infarct size have somewhat tempered interest in antioxidant infarct trials. By contrast, the negative clinical consequences of stunning may indeed be preventable by utilizing antioxidants to help restore postischemic cardiac pump function. Several as yet unanswered questions remain regarding oxidative stress in the reperfused heart, its significance to cardiomyocyte damage, and its ability to elicit specific postischemic myocardial derangements. Targeted mechanistic studies are required to address these questions and to define the pathogenic role of oxidative stress (and, hence, the therapeutic potential of antioxidant intervention) in myocardial ischemia-reperfusion injury. The overall aim of current research in this area is to enable the cardiac surgeon/cardiologist to advance beyond the largely palliative drugs now available for management of the coronary heart-disease patient and attack directly the pathogenic determinants of heart-muscle ischemia-reperfusion injury. Optimal use of antioxidants may help address this important medical need.

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Year:  1995        PMID: 7748481     DOI: 10.1080/10408399509527688

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Crit Rev Food Sci Nutr        ISSN: 1040-8398            Impact factor:   11.176


  4 in total

Review 1.  Determinants of antioxidant status in humans.

Authors:  A M Papas
Journal:  Lipids       Date:  1996-03       Impact factor: 1.880

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Authors:  Byung Kyu Park; Jae Bock Chung; Jin Heon Lee; Jeong Hun Suh; Seung Woo Park; Si Young Song; Hyeyoung Kim; Kyung Hwan Kim; Jin Kyung Kang
Journal:  World J Gastroenterol       Date:  2003-10       Impact factor: 5.742

Review 3.  Role of Oxidative Stress in Reperfusion following Myocardial Ischemia and Its Treatments.

Authors:  Mi Xiang; Yingdong Lu; Laiyun Xin; Jialiang Gao; Chang Shang; Zhilin Jiang; Hongchen Lin; Xuqin Fang; Yi Qu; Yuling Wang; Zihuan Shen; Mingjing Zhao; Xiangning Cui
Journal:  Oxid Med Cell Longev       Date:  2021-05-18       Impact factor: 6.543

4.  Ferroptosis-Specific Inhibitor Ferrostatin-1 Relieves H2O2-Induced Redox Imbalance in Primary Cardiomyocytes through the Nrf2/ARE Pathway.

Authors:  Chaofeng Sun; Fang Peng; Jianfei Li; Xudong Cui; Xin Qiao; Wangliang Zhu
Journal:  Dis Markers       Date:  2022-02-22       Impact factor: 3.434

  4 in total

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