11 research outputs found

    The impact of coronary artery disease on the coronary vasomotor response to nonionic contrast media

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    BACKGROUND: Coronary artery disease (CAD) alters the vasomotor response to a variety of pharmacological agents. We tested the hypothesis that CAD also has an impact on the coronary vasomotor response to radiologic contrast media. METHODS AND RESULTS: We performed quantitative coronary angiography in 42 patients without angiographic evidence of CAD and 38 patients with CAD in the left coronary artery. Angiographically smooth coronary segments (n=235) were analyzed for changes on luminal diameters and coronary venous oxygen saturation in response to 3 media: the nonionic dimer iodixanol, the nonionic monomer iopromide, and the ionic agent ioxaglate. In subjects without CAD, we assessed the effects of intracoronary administration of the nitric oxide synthase inhibitor N(G)-monomethyl-L-arginine and of the cyclooxygenase inhibitor indomethacin on such changes. Iodixanol induced coronary vasodilation in subjects without CAD (8.8+/-8.6%, P/=20 mm apart from a stenosis (4.7+/-9.4%, P=NS) and significant constriction in segments <20 mm from a stenosis (-3.8+/-4.6%, P<0. 05). Similar results were obtained with iopromide, but no changes were found with ioxaglate. All contrast media induced transient (<35 seconds) increases in coronary venous oxygen saturation in all subjects. Indomethacin, but not N(G)-monomethyl-L-arginine, blunted the vasodilating effect of iodixanol and iopromide (by 80% and 76%, respectively; P<0.001). CONCLUSIONS: Nonionic contrast media induce a vasodilatory response in normal vessels not by a mechanism involving increased flow or endothelial nitric oxide synthesis, but rather by depending on preserved vascular cyclooxygenase activity. CAD changes normal epicardial vasodilatory response into vasoconstriction

    Endothelin-1 release from atherosclerotic plaque after percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty in stable angina pectoris and single-vessel coronary artery disease.

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    To assess the effects of percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty on endothelin-1 (ET-1) release, we assessed ET-1 concentrations at different sites of the coronary circulation in patients submitted to elective procedures. ET-1 levels immediately downstream from the plaque and ET-1 aortocoronary gradient increased significantly after the procedure, which was related to mechanical wall stress in patients only receiving balloons, but not in those undergoing stent percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty. No changes were found in the coronary sinus; these results suggest ET-1 release from the plaque rather than an ischemia/reperfusion-related production from the distal myocardium
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