z-logo
open-access-imgOpen Access
Daily Ischemic Preconditioning Provides Sustained Protection From Ischemia–Reperfusion Induced Endothelial Dysfunction: A Human Study
Author(s) -
Luca Mary Clare,
Liuni Andrew,
McLaughlin Kelsey,
Gori Tommaso,
Parker John D.
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
journal of the american heart association
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.494
H-Index - 85
ISSN - 2047-9980
DOI - 10.1161/jaha.112.000075
Subject(s) - medicine , celecoxib , ischemic preconditioning , placebo , ischemia , anesthesia , crossover study , forearm , surgery , pathology , alternative medicine
Background It is well established that acute ischemic preconditioning ( IPC ) protects against ischemia–reperfusion ( IR ) injury; however, the effectiveness of repeated IPC exposure has not been extensively investigated. We aimed to determine whether daily IPC episodes provide continued protection from IR injury in a human forearm model, and the role of cyclooxygenase‐2 in these responses. Methods and Results Thirty healthy volunteers were randomized to participate in 2 of 3 protocols ( IR alone, 1‐day IPC , 7‐day IPC ) in an operator‐blinded, crossover design. Subjects in the IR alone protocol underwent flow‐mediated dilation ( FMD ) measurements pre‐ and post‐ IR (15′ upper‐arm ischemia and 15′ reperfusion). The 1‐day IPC protocol involved FMD measurements before and after 1 episode of IPC (3 cycles of 5′ upper‐arm ischemia and 5′ reperfusion) and IR . Day 7 of the 7‐day IPC protocol was identical to the 1‐day IPC protocol but was preceded by single daily episodes of IPC for 6 days prior. During each protocol, subjects received a 7‐day treatment of either the cyclooxygenase‐2 inhibitor celecoxib or placebo. Pre‐ IR FMD was similar between groups. IR alone reduced FMD post‐ IR (placebo, Δ FMD : −4.4±0.7%; celecoxib, Δ FMD : −5.0±0.5%). One‐day IPC completely prevented this effect (placebo, Δ FMD : −1.1±0.6%; celecoxib, Δ FMD : 0.0±0.7%; P <0.0001). Similarly, 7‐day IPC demonstrated persistent endothelial protection post‐ IR (placebo, Δ FMD : −0.9±0.9%; celecoxib, Δ FMD : 0.0±0.8%; P <0.0001, P <0.0001 for ANOVA effect of IPC protocol). Celecoxib did not alter responses to IR in any protocol. Conclusions Daily episodes of IPC provide sustained protection from IR ‐induced endothelial dysfunction in humans through a mechanism that appears cyclooxygenase‐2‐independent.

The content you want is available to Zendy users.

Already have an account? Click here to sign in.
Having issues? You can contact us here