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Pharmacologic Preconditioning of Estrogen by Activation of the Myocardial Adenosine Triphosphate-Sensitive Potassium Channel in Patients Undergoing Coronary Angioplasty
Resource
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN COLLEGE OF CARDIOLOGY v.39 n.5 pp.871-877
Journal
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN COLLEGE OF CARDIOLOGY
Journal Volume
v.39
Journal Issue
n.5
Pages
871-877
Date Issued
2002
Date
2002
Author(s)
LEE, TSUNG-MING
SU, SHENG-FANG
CHOU, TSAI-FWU
TSAI, CHANG-HER
Abstract
OBJECTIVES The purpose of this study was to determine whether administration of estrogen produces cardioprotective effects in patients undergoing coronary angioplasty. BACKGROUND We have previously demonstrated that estrogen can provide cardioprotection by activating the mitochondrial adenosine triphosphate-sensitive potassium (K-ATP) channel, a major contributor to ischemic cardioprotection. METHODS Fifty patients undergoing angioplasty of a major epicardial coronary artery were randomly allocated to either ischemic preconditioning or intracoronary estrogen administration in the presence or absence of glibenclamide (glyburide). RESULTS The coronary collateral circulation, as quantitatively assessed by an intracoronary Doppler flow wire, was similar during balloon inflation among the groups. Patients in the preconditioned and estrogen-treated groups significantly lowered their ischemic burden, as assessed by an ST- segment shift, chest pain score and myocardial lactate extraction ratio, as compared with control subjects. The reduction in the ST-segment shift afforded by estrogen during the first inflation (-63% vs. first inflation in the preconditioned group) was similar to that afforded by preconditioning during the second inflation (-68% vs. first inflation). In contrast, the patients given glibenclamide developed significantly higher ischemic burden during the first and second inflations, as compared with those in the estrogen-treated group alone. CONCLUSIONS It is concluded that intracoronary administration of estrogen before balloon angioplasty rendered the myocardium relatively resistant to subsequent ischemia, and the degree of cardioprotective effect was comparable to that afforded by ischemic preconditioning. The effect of estrogen was abolished by glibenclamide, suggesting that the cardioprotective effect of estrogen may result from activation of myocardial K-ATP channels. (C) 2002 by the American College of Cardiology Foundation.
Subjects
K+ CHANNEL
CARDIOVASCULAR-DISEASE
REACTIVE HYPEREMIA
FLOW VELOCITY
NITRIC-OXIDE
BLOOD-FLOW
Type
journal article