Article date: August 1996
By: JEAN LOUIS MEGNIEN, ALAIN SIMON, ANTONIA ANDRIANI, PATRICK SEGOND, SOPHIE JEANNIN, JAIME LEVENSON, in Volume 42, Issue 2, pages 187-193
1We tested whether lipid lowering treatment with HMG CoA reductase inhibitor modified the flow mediated large artery reactivity in primary pure hypercholesterolaemia.
2Abnormalities in arterial reactivity have been described in the presence of high blood cholesterol, in particular an enhanced constriction of the brachial artery in response to acute induction of a low flow state.
3Using pulsed‐Doppler, we measured brachial artery diameter and flow velocity at rest and their changes induced by wrist occlusion before and after 3 months of double‐blind treatment by pravastatin (40 mg orally) in 13 subjects and placebo in 15 others.
4The significant decrease (P<0.01) in diameter induced by wrist occlusion before (0.34±0.08 mm) placebo and pravastatin (0.39±0.10 mm) persisted after placebo (0.26±0.07 mm) but was abolished after pravastatin (0.07±0.05 mm). The absolute change in diameter induced by wrist occlusion was lower after than before pravastatin (P<0.01) and lower after pravastin than after placebo (P<0.05). Diameter during wrist occlusion was higher after pravastatin than after placebo (4.35±0.16 vs 3.89±0.09 mm); P<0.01).
5These findings indicate that the lipid changes induced by pravastatin and/or some unknown but direct mechanism of the drug itself inhibit low‐flow‐mediated vasoconstriction associated with hypercholesterolaemia. Such effects may have important implications for the treatment of vasospasm often seen in the presence of high blood cholesterol.
DOI: 10.1046/j.1365-2125.1996.04047.x
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