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Vasomotor responses of coronary stenoses to acetylcholine and their relation to serum lipid levels in stable angina pectoris
Authors:Dimitris Tousoulis MD   PhD   Diana Gorog MBBS   Tom Crake MD   Homeyra Homaei MD   Nabeel Ahmed MBBS  Graham J. Davies MD
Affiliation:

a Cardiology Unit, Imperial College School of Medicine, Hammersmith Hospital, London, United Kingdom

Abstract:The effects of acetylcholine administration on coronary stenoses in relation to serum lipids level were evaluated in 18 patients (15 men, 3 women) with coronary artery disease and stable angina. Intracoronary acetylcholine was infused in concentrations 10−7, 10−6, 10−5 M, followed by intracoronary bolus administration of isosorbide dinitrate. Computerized angiography was used to assess the changes in the diameter of stenoses and of proximal and distal segments. During acetylcholine infusion, at concentrations between 10−7 to 10 −5M, there was a significant (p <0.01) dose-dependent constriction of proximal and distal segments and of stenoses reversed by isosorbide dinitrate. There was no correlation between the serum total cholesterol level and the responses of proximal and distal segments to acetylcholine or nitrate. A correlation (p <0.05) was found between the serum total cholesterol level and the response of stenoses to acetylcholine, but there was no correlation with the response to isosorbide dinitrate. In conclusion, in patients with stable angina current serum total cholesterol level correlates with the vasomotor response of coronary stenoses to intracoronary acetylcholine. These findings are consistent with a direct effect of cholesterol, increasing basal coronary vasomotor tone and increasing the stimulated vasoconstrictor response of stenoses.
Keywords:vasomotor reflex   coronary artery obstruction   angina pectoris   acetylcholine
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