BACKGROUND: Acetylcholine produces coronary artery (CA) constriction in diabetic patients, suggesting an impairment of endothelium-dependent dilation. In diabetes, multiple metabolic abnormalities may inactivate nitric oxide through oxygen free radical production. METHODS AND RESULTS: To examine the mechanism of this abnormal response, two physiological tests (ie, a cold pressor test [CPT] and coronary flow increase induced by an injection of 10 mg papaverine [PAP] in the distal left anterior descending CA) were performed before and after either intravenous L-arginine (625 mg/min x 10 minutes) or intravenous deferoxamine (50 mg/min x 10 minutes) in 22 normotensive nonsmoking diabetic patients with angiographically normal CAs and normal cholesterol. Coronary surface areas were measured with quantitative angiography. Before the administration of L-arginine or deferoxamine, CPT induced CA constriction in both groups (-14 +/- 10% and -15 +/- 11%, respectively; each P<.001), and PAP injection in distal LAD did not modify significantly proximal LAD dimensions. In the 10 diabetic patients receiving L-arginine, responses to CPT and PAP were not modified. Conversely, in the 12 patients receiving deferoxamine, CA dilated in response to the two tests (+10 +/- 9% after CPT and +22 +/- 7% after PAP, each P<.001). Intracoronary isosorbide dinitrate, an endothelium-independent dilator, produced similar dilation in the two groups (+47 +/- 19% and +41 +/- 15%, respectively; each P<.001). CONCLUSIONS: This study shows that (1) responses of angiographically normal CAs to CPT and to flow increase are impaired in diabetic patients; (2) abnormal responses are not improved by L-arginine, suggesting that a deficit in substrate for nitric oxide synthesis is not involved; and (3) deferoxamine restores a vasodilator response to the two tests, suggesting that inactivation of NO by oxygen species might be partly responsible for the impairment of CA dilation in diabetic patients.
BACKGROUND:Acetylcholine produces coronary artery (CA) constriction in diabeticpatients, suggesting an impairment of endothelium-dependent dilation. In diabetes, multiple metabolic abnormalities may inactivate nitric oxide through oxygen free radical production. METHODS AND RESULTS: To examine the mechanism of this abnormal response, two physiological tests (ie, a cold pressor test [CPT] and coronary flow increase induced by an injection of 10 mg papaverine [PAP] in the distal left anterior descending CA) were performed before and after either intravenous L-arginine (625 mg/min x 10 minutes) or intravenous deferoxamine (50 mg/min x 10 minutes) in 22 normotensive nonsmoking diabeticpatients with angiographically normal CAs and normal cholesterol. Coronary surface areas were measured with quantitative angiography. Before the administration of L-arginine or deferoxamine, CPT induced CA constriction in both groups (-14 +/- 10% and -15 +/- 11%, respectively; each P<.001), and PAP injection in distal LAD did not modify significantly proximal LAD dimensions. In the 10 diabeticpatients receiving L-arginine, responses to CPT and PAP were not modified. Conversely, in the 12 patients receiving deferoxamine, CA dilated in response to the two tests (+10 +/- 9% after CPT and +22 +/- 7% after PAP, each P<.001). Intracoronary isosorbide dinitrate, an endothelium-independent dilator, produced similar dilation in the two groups (+47 +/- 19% and +41 +/- 15%, respectively; each P<.001). CONCLUSIONS: This study shows that (1) responses of angiographically normal CAs to CPT and to flow increase are impaired in diabeticpatients; (2) abnormal responses are not improved by L-arginine, suggesting that a deficit in substrate for nitric oxide synthesis is not involved; and (3) deferoxamine restores a vasodilator response to the two tests, suggesting that inactivation of NO by oxygen species might be partly responsible for the impairment of CA dilation in diabeticpatients.
Authors: Whady Hueb; Neuza Lopes; Paulo R Soares; Bernard J Gersh; Eduardo Gomes Lima; Ricardo D Oliveira Vieira; Cibele Larrosa Garzillo; Rosa Rhami Garcia; Alexandre Costa Pereira; Celia Maria Strunz; Claudio Meneguetti; Jeane Tsutsui; Jose Parga; Pedro Lemos; Alexandre Hueb; Augusto Ushida; Raul Maranhão; Dalton A Chamone; Jose Af Ramires Journal: BMC Cardiovasc Disord Date: 2010-09-29 Impact factor: 2.298
Authors: Timea Beleznai; Attila Feher; David Spielvogel; Steven L Lansman; Zsolt Bagi Journal: Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol Date: 2011-01-07 Impact factor: 4.733