The effect of oral administration of 500 mg of levodopa with 50 mg of carbidopa, a peripheral dopadecarboxylase inhibitor, on coronary vasomotion during vasoconstrictor stimuli was examined in 15 patients with variant angina presenting with hyperventilation-induced myocardial ischemia. Patients were studied during 3 noninvasive sessions and 1 angiographic session. In all sessions the basic protocol consisted of provocation of coronary spasm by hyperventilation before and 2 hours after levodopa and carbidopa administration. During angiography, great cardiac vein blood flow, right atrial and aortic pressures were measured, and coronary angiograms were recorded at baseline and 1 to 4 minutes after each hyperventilation. Samples for dopamine plasma levels were drawn before and throughout the studies. In 3 selected patients, levodopa and carbidopa were associated with 30 mg of domperidone, an antagonist of dopamine peripheral receptors. Levodopa and carbidopa consistently prevented the occurrence of ischemia after hyperventilation in 6 of the 15 patients. This was due to inhibition of local coronary spasm in 2 patients and reduced coronary constriction in 4. Ischemia due to hyperventilation was still prevented despite addition of domperidone with levodopa and carbidopa. Plasma dopamine levels were 23 +/- 15 before and 739 +/- 284 pg/ml 2 hours after administration of levodopa and carbidopa. These findings are consistent with either a decreased central dopaminergic activity and associated disregulation of vasomotor tone, or a peripheral vasodilatory effect of increasing dopamine.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0002-9149(87)90291-8 | DOI Listing |
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