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J Am Coll Cardiol, 1984; 4:1114-1117
© 1984 by the American College of Cardiology Foundation
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Does indomethacin attenuate the coronary vasodilatory effect of nitroglycerin?

MD Winniford, J Jackson, CR Malloy, RB Rehr, WB Campbell, and LD Hillis

Although previous studies have shown that indomethacin attenuates the dilative effects of nitroglycerin on human peripheral veins and canine coronary arteries, its ability to alter the influence of nitroglycerin on coronary blood flow in human beings is unknown. In 22 patients (16 men and 6 women, aged 47 +/- 10 years [mean +/- standard deviation]) referred for the evaluation of chest pain, heart rate, systemic arterial pressure, coronary sinus blood flow (by thermodilution) and coronary vascular resistance (mean arterial pressure/coronary sinus blood flow) were measured before and during the administration of intracoronary saline solution (n = 6, [control subjects]) or intracoronary nitroglycerin, 100 micrograms (n = 16). Of these 16 patients, 8 had no pretreatment and the other 8 received 50 mg of indomethacin orally, 10 and 2 to 3 hours before study. In the six control subjects, no variable changed with saline injection. In the eight patients given nitroglycerin without indomethacin pretreatment, heart rate and mean systemic arterial pressure were changed modestly (72 +/- 15 to 74 +/- 15 beats/min and 93 +/- 9 to 87 +/- 13 mm Hg, respectively, p less than 0.05), coronary sinus blood flow increased by 56 +/- 43% (107 +/- 72 to 155 +/- 78 ml/min, p less than 0.001) and coronary vascular resistance decreased (1.12 +/- 0.50 to 0.66 +/- 0.26 mm Hg/ml per min, p = 0.004).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


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R. A. Lange, R. G. Cigarroa, E. D. Flores, W. McBride, A. S. Kim, P. J. Wells, J. B. Bedotto, R. S. Danziger, and L. D. Hillis
Potentiation of Cocaine-Induced Coronary Vasoconstriction by Beta-Adrenergic Blockade
Ann Intern Med, June 15, 1990; 112(12): 897 - 903.
[Abstract] [PDF]



 
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