Literature DB >> 9927394

L-Arginine normalizes coronary vasomotion in long-term smokers.

R Campisi1, J Czernin, H Schöder, J W Sayre, H R Schelbert.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Noninvasive measurements of myocardial blood flow (MBF) with PET revealed an abnormal coronary vasomotor response to cold pressor test in healthy long-term smokers. If coronary endothelial dysfunction accounted for this abnormality, we hypothesized that it could be reversed by L-arginine as the substrate for NO synthase. METHODS AND
RESULTS: MBF was quantified with 13N-labeled ammonia and PET in 11 healthy smokers (age, 45+/-10 years; 27+/-10 years of smoking) and in 12 age-matched nonsmokers on 2 separate days. On day 1, MBF was measured at rest and, after intravenous L-arginine, during cold pressor test. On day 2, MBF was measured during cold pressor test and then at rest during L-arginine. Baseline rate-pressure product (RPP) (6559+/-1590 versus 7144+/-1157 bpmxmm Hg) and MBF (0.65+/-0.14 versus 0.73+/-0.13 mL x g-1 x min-1) were similar in nonsmokers and smokers. Cold pressor test increased RPP similarly in both groups (53+/-26% versus 46+/-26%), whereas MBF increased in nonsmokers (to 0.93+/-0.25 mL x g-1 x min-1; P<0.05) but not in smokers (0.80+/-0.16 mL x g-1 x min-1). The percent MBF increase differed between nonsmokers and smokers (44+/-25% versus 11+/-14%; P=0.0017). However, after L-arginine, the magnitude of MBF response to cold pressor test no longer differed between groups (48+/-36% versus 48+/-28%), whereas RPP again increased similarly in the 2 groups (59+/-30% versus 44+/-16%). L-Arginine had no effect on resting MBF in smokers or nonsmokers.
CONCLUSIONS: Our findings implicate the coronary endothelium as the major site of the abnormal vasomotor response in long-term smokers. Cold pressor test combined with PET imaging may allow the noninvasive identification of coronary endothelial dysfunction in humans.

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Year:  1999        PMID: 9927394     DOI: 10.1161/01.cir.99.4.491

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Circulation        ISSN: 0009-7322            Impact factor:   29.690


  17 in total

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