Background: Remote ischemic conditioning (RIC) confers protection against myocardial ischemia-reperfusion injury and may modulate coronary blood flow. We investigated whether RIC affects resting myocardial perfusion (MP) in patients with suspected ischemic coronary artery disease by quantitative MP imaging.

Methods And Results: We included 49 patients with suspected ischemic coronary artery disease. Resting MP was quantified by Rubidium positron emission tomography/computed tomography (Rb-PET/CT) imaging before and after RIC, performed as four cycles of 5 minutes upper arm ischemia and reperfusion. Subsequent adenosine Rb-PET/CT stress-imaging identified non-ischemic and reversibly ischemic myocardial segments. MicroRNA-144 plasma levels were measured before and after RIC. Normalized for rate pressure product, RIC did not affect MP globally (P = .64) or in non-ischemic myocardial segments (P = .58) but decreased MP in reversibly ischemic myocardial segments (-0.11 mL/min/g decrease in MP following RIC; 95% CI -0.17 to -0.06, P < .001). However, we found no effect of RIC when MP was normalized for cardiac work. MicroRNA-144 plasma levels increased following RIC (P = .006) but did not correlate with a change in global MP in response to RIC (P = .40).

Conclusions: RIC did not substantially affect resting MP globally or in non-ischemic and reversibly ischemic myocardial territories in patients with suspected ischemic coronary artery disease.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12350-016-0709-7DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

patients suspected
12
suspected ischemic
12
ischemic coronary
12
coronary artery
12
artery disease
12
myocardial segments
12
remote ischemic
8
ischemic conditioning
8
myocardial perfusion
8
perfusion patients
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!