57 research outputs found

    Eicosanoid biosynthesis in patients with stable angina: Beneficial effects of very low dose aspirin

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    AbstractObjectives. We assessed the production of eicosanoids and the effects of very low dose aspirin in patients with stable angina under basal conditions and during rapid atrial pacing.Background. Platelet activation occurs in acute ischemic syndromes but is still controversial in stable angina. Very low dose aspirin is known to be platelet selective and can be used to test the hypothesis of the platelet origin of increased thromboxane production in stable angina.Methods. Urinary excretion of eicosanoids was measured in 42 patients, including 24 patients with and 18 patients without coronary artery disease. The effects of 50 mg/day of aspirin were measured at rest and during pacing-induced ischemia in 10 patients with stable angina and were compared with a similar group of patients not treated by aspirin.Results. Excretion of 11-dehydro-thromboxane B2was 2.6 times higher in patients with stable angina than in healthy subjects (mean [±SEM] 74.8 ± 13.0 [24 patients] vs. 29.0 ± 5.4 [18 patients] ng/mmol of creatinine, p < 0.01). Urinary prostacyclin metabolite levels did not differ between the two groups. Treatment for 8 days with 50 mg/day of aspirin inhibited platelet cyclooxygenase, as reflected by the 97% reduction of in vitro serum thromboxane production. This aspirin regimen normalized the level of urinary thromboxane metabolites in patients with angina (17.3 ± 3.4 ng/mmol of creatinine [10 patients], p < 0.001 from baseline level before treatment) and did not change prostacyclin metabolite levels. Atrial pacing in patients with angina not treated with aspirin caused lactate and thromboxane release into the coronary sinus. In patients with very low dose aspirin therapy, pacing did not cause thromboxane release despite inducing myocardial ischemia. However, fractional lactate extraction decreased less sharply in patients with than without aspirin therapy.Conclusions. Thromboxane production is greatly increased in patients with stable angina. Very low dose aspirin administered to these patients reduces thromboxane synthesis to normal levels, preserves prostacyclin biosynthesis and prevents acute thromboxane release into the coronary circulation during pacing-induced ischemia. Our data suggest that platelets (not monocytes/ macrophages) are activated in stable angina to produce thromboxane

    Accuracy, precision, and safety of stereotactic, frame-based, intraoperative MRI-guided and MRI-verified deep brain stimulation in 650 consecutive procedures

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    OBJECTIVE: Suboptimal lead placement is one of the most common indications for deep brain stimulation (DBS) revision procedures. Confirming lead placement in relation to the visible anatomical target with dedicated stereotactic imaging before terminating the procedure can mitigate this risk. In this study, the authors examined the accuracy, precision, and safety of intraoperative MRI (iMRI) to both guide and verify lead placement during frame-based stereotactic surgery. METHODS: A retrospective analysis of 650 consecutive DBS procedures for targeting accuracy, precision, and perioperative complications was performed. Frame-based lead placement took place in an operating room equipped with an MRI machine using stereotactic images to verify lead placement before removing the stereotactic frame. Immediate lead relocation was performed when necessary. Systematic analysis of the targeting error was calculated. RESULTS: Verification of 1201 DBS leads with stereotactic MRI was performed in 643 procedures and with stereotactic CT in 7. The mean ± SD of the final targeting error was 0.9 ± 0.3 mm (range 0.1-2.3 mm). Anatomically acceptable lead placement was achieved with a single brain pass for 97% (n = 1164) of leads; immediate intraoperative relocation was performed in 37 leads (3%) to obtain satisfactory anatomical placement. General anesthesia was used in 91% (n = 593) of the procedures. Hemorrhage was noted after 4 procedures (0.6%); 3 patients (0.4% of procedures) presented with transient neurological symptoms, and 1 experienced delayed cognitive decline. Two bleeds coincided with immediate relocation (2 of 37 leads, 5.4%), which contrasts with hemorrhage in 2 (0.2%) of 1164 leads implanted on the first pass (p = 0.0058). Three patients had transient seizures in the postoperative period. The seizures coincided with hemorrhage in 2 of these patients and with immediate lead relocation in the other. There were 21 infections (3.2% of procedures, 1.5% in 3 months) leading to hardware removal. Delayed (> 3 months) retargeting of 6 leads (0.5%) in 4 patients (0.6% of procedures) was performed because of suboptimal stimulation benefit. There were no MRI-related complications, no permanent motor deficits, and no deaths. CONCLUSIONS: To the authors' knowledge, this is the largest series reporting the use of iMRI to guide and verify lead location during DBS surgery. It demonstrates a high level of accuracy, precision, and safety. Significantly higher hemorrhage was encountered when multiple brain passes were required for lead implantation, although none led to permanent deficit. Meticulous audit and calibration can improve precision and maximize safety

    Statin Treatment Increases Lifespan and Improves Cardiac Health in Drosophila by Decreasing Specific Protein Prenylation

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    Statins such as simvastatin are 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl coenzyme A (HMG-CoA) reductase inhibitors and standard therapy for the prevention and treatment of cardiovascular diseases in mammals. Here we show that simvastatin significantly increased the mean and maximum lifespan of Drosophila melanogaster (Drosophila) and enhanced cardiac function in aging flies by significantly reducing heart arrhythmias and increasing the contraction proportion of the contraction/relaxation cycle. These results appeared independent of internal changes in ubiquinone or juvenile hormone levels. Rather, they appeared to involve decreased protein prenylation. Simvastatin decreased the membrane association (prenylation) of specific small Ras GTPases in mice. Both farnesyl (L744832) and type 1 geranylgeranyl transferase (GGTI-298) inhibitors increased Drosophila lifespan. These data are the most direct evidence to date that decreased protein prenylation can increase cardiac health and lifespan in any metazoan species, and may explain the pleiotropic (non-cholesterol related) health effects of statins

    QUANTITATIVE DETECTION OF FREE RADICALS ON MECHANICALLY FORMED POLYMER SURFACES

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