1. Effects of simvastatin/ezetimibe on microparticles, endothelial progenitor cells and platelet aggregation in subjects with coronary heart disease under antiplatelet therapy.
- Author
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Camargo LM, França CN, Izar MC, Bianco HT, Lins LS, Barbosa SP, Pinheiro LF, and Fonseca FA
- Subjects
- Aged, Anticholesteremic Agents pharmacology, Aspirin therapeutic use, Cholesterol, LDL blood, Clopidogrel, Drug Combinations, Ezetimibe, Female, Flow Cytometry, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Platelet Aggregation Inhibitors therapeutic use, Ticlopidine analogs & derivatives, Ticlopidine therapeutic use, Triglycerides blood, Azetidines pharmacology, Cell-Derived Microparticles drug effects, Coronary Disease drug therapy, Endothelial Progenitor Cells drug effects, Platelet Aggregation drug effects, Simvastatin pharmacology
- Abstract
It is not known whether the addition of ezetimibe to statins adds cardiovascular protection beyond the expected changes in lipid levels. Subjects with coronary heart disease were treated with four consecutive 1-week courses of therapy (T) and evaluations. The courses were: T1, 100 mg aspirin alone; T2, 100 mg aspirin and 40 mg simvastatin/10 mg ezetimibe; T3, 40 mg simvastatin/10 mg ezetimibe, and 75 mg clopidogrel (300 mg initial loading dose); T4, 75 mg clopidogrel alone. Platelet aggregation was examined in whole blood. Endothelial microparticles (CD51), platelet microparticles (CD42/CD31), and endothelial progenitor cells (CD34/CD133; CDKDR/CD133, or CD34/KDR) were quantified by flow cytometry. Endothelial function was examined by flow-mediated dilation. Comparisons between therapies revealed differences in lipids (T2 and T3
T1 and T4, P=0.001). Decreased platelet aggregation was observed after aspirin (arachidonic acid, T1 - Published
- 2014
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