Circulation
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
Restenosis after coronary stent placement and randomization to a 4-week combined antiplatelet or anticoagulant therapy: six-month angiographic follow-up of the Intracoronary Stenting and Antithrombotic Regimen (ISAR) Trial.
Platelets and mural thrombus at the lesion site may play a key role in initiating the restenosis process after coronary interventions. The ISAR Trial provides a comparison of the outcomes of patients randomized to two different antithrombotic regimens administered for 4 weeks after successful coronary stent placement: combined antiplatelet therapy (aspirin plus ticlopidine) or a conventional anticoagulant regimen (phenprocoumon with initial overlapping heparin plus aspirin). Within the first 4 weeks after stent placement, combined antiplatelet therapy has been associated with a significant reduction of ischemic complications. In the present study, we examined whether combined antiplatelet therapy administered for 4 weeks after stent placement is able to reduce the process of restenosis at 6 months. ⋯ This study shows that combined antiplatelet therapy (aspirin plus ticlopidine) administered for 4 weeks after coronary Palmaz-Schatz stent placement does not result in a detectable benefit for the prevention of restenosis compared with conventional anticoagulant therapy (phenprocoumon with initial overlapping heparin plus aspirin).
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Endothelium-dependent nitric oxide-mediated vasodilation is impaired in rats with pulmonary hypertension (PH) induced by chronic hypoxia or by monocrotaline injection. We therefore investigated whether the prolonged administration of the nitric oxide precursor L-arginine would alleviate PH in both rat models. ⋯ We conclude that L-arginine ameliorated the changes associated with PH in rats, perhaps by modifying the endogenous nitric oxide production.
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Patients receiving oral hypoglycemic agents for diabetes mellitus are at increased risk of cardiovascular mortality. Oral hypoglycemic agents are inhibitors of the ATP-sensitive potassium (KATP) channel. Ischemic preconditioning is mediated by KATP channel activation. We therefore hypothesized that myocardium from patients taking long-term oral hypoglycemic agents would be resistant to the protection by ischemic preconditioning. ⋯ Human myocardium from patients without long-term exposure to oral hypoglycemic agents is functionally protected by preconditioning. Long-term oral hypoglycemic intake blocks the protection by preconditioning. These data suggest that ischemic preconditioning in human myocardium relies on KATP channels, and long-term inhibition of KATP channels with oral hypoglycemic agents may explain the excess cardiovascular mortality in these patients.
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Review Practice Guideline Guideline
Prevention of bacterial endocarditis. Recommendations by the American Heart Association.
To update recommendations issued by the American Heart Association last published in 1990 for the prevention of bacterial endocarditis in individuals at risk for this disease. ⋯ Major changes in the updated recommendations include the following: (1) emphasis that most cases of endocarditis are not attributable to an invasive procedure; (2) cardiac conditions are stratified into high-, moderate-, and negligible-risk categories based on potential outcome if endocarditis develops; (3) procedures that may cause bacteremia and for which prophylaxis is recommended are more clearly specified; (4) an algorithm was developed to more clearly define when prophylaxis is recommended for patients with mitral valve prolapse; (5) for oral or dental procedures the initial amoxicillin dose is reduced to 2 g, a follow-up antibiotic dose is no longer recommended, erythromycin is no longer recommended for penicillin-allergic individuals, but clindamycin and other alternatives are offered; and (6) for gastrointestinal or genitourinary procedures, the prophylactic regimens have been simplified. These changes were instituted to more clearly define when prophylaxis is or is not recommended, improve practitioner and patient compliance, reduce cost and potential gastrointestinal adverse effects, and approach more uniform worldwide recommendations.