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[Clinical significance of plasma concentration of macrophage colony-stimulating factor in patients with vasospastic angina].

Authors :
Tomimura M
Saitoh T
Kishida H
Kusama Y
Takano T
Source :
Journal of cardiology [J Cardiol] 2002 Jan; Vol. 39 (1), pp. 19-27.
Publication Year :
2002

Abstract

Objectives: The concentration of macrophage colony-stimulating factor (M-CSF), an inflammatory cytokine, increases with the progression of coronary lesions, but no clinical investigations have evaluated the relationship to coronary vascular tone. The present study investigated the relationship between M-CSF and vasoreactivity of the coronary arteries in patients with vasospastic angina.<br />Methods: Vasospastic angina (VSA) was characterized by transient chest pain and ischemic ST segment changes at rest, or by a positive result in spasm provocation testing with acetylcholine. The subjects were 24 patients with stable VSA(inactive VSA group) treated on an outpatient basis, 31 VSA patients hospitalized with unstable angina (active VSA group), and 13 healthy subjects(control group). The sensitivity of determination of plasma M-CSF in blood was 40 pg/ml. The levels of this factor in each group were compared. Based on the findings of the acetylcholine vasospasm-induction test, patients were divided into those with single-vessel vasospasm and those with multivessel vasospasm, and, according to the dose of acetylcholine required to induce spasm, into high- and low-dose groups. Plasma M-CSF levels in each group were compared.<br />Results: Mean plasma M-CSF was 598 +/- 180 pg/ml in the inactive VSA group, 775 +/- 194 pg/ml in the active VSA group, and 632 +/- 103 pg/ml in the control group. The mean plasma M-CSF level in the active VSA group was significantly higher than that in the inactive VSA group(p < 0.01). Mean plasma M-CSF level in the single-vessel and multivessel vasospasm groups was highest for active VSA patients with multivessel vasospasm (872 +/- 173 pg/ml). The relationship with the acetylcholine induction dose clarified that plasma M-CSF levels were highest in patients with active VSA in the acetylcholine low-dose group (825 +/- 177 pg/ml, p < 0.001).<br />Conclusions: Plasma M-CSF concentration reflects the vasoreactivity of coronary spasm in the VSA group, and may be an indicator of the severity of coronary endothelial dysfunction.

Details

Language :
Japanese
ISSN :
0914-5087
Volume :
39
Issue :
1
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Journal of cardiology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
11828794