Abstract

Daily life ischemia has generated considerable interest because most of it is silent and associated with increased risk of adverse outcome. Coronary vasomotion, as well as increases in myocardial oxygen demand, seem important in the pathogenesis of this form of ischemia, so treatment with nitrates seems rational. Administration of sublingual nitroglycerin hourly, over 12 hours, was shown to decrease both silent and painful ischemic episodes in patients with effort angina. Subsequently, isosorbide dinitrate or mononitrate, given either as an intravenous infusion or orally, was shown to decrease both silent and painful ischemic episodes in patients with unstable rest angina and in those with severe angina. More recently, 6 studies have reported using transdermal nitroglycerin for daily life ischemia. Three of these reported open-label uncontrolled observations and suggested that ischemia frequency may be reduced approximately 60–80% during treatment with doses of 10–30 mg/ day, with a duration of treatment ranging from 1 hour to 14 days. In 2 of these reports the duration of ischemia also decreased. The other 3 studies were randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled studies with a total enrollment of 86 patients. These studies provided mked results. One suggested that evidence for partial tolerance develops within 1 day of treatment, using large continuous or intermittent doses (mean, 52 mg/ day). Another suggested that no tolerance develops to intermittent dosing (18 mg/16 hr out of 24 hr) during exercise testing but no effect is seen on daily life ischemia. The remaining study suggested that tolerance does not develop using small doses (15 mg/day) continuously over 14 days for ischemia during daily life, and that this response is different from that observed using the calcium antagonist nifedipine. These limited observations and conflicting results underscore a need for additional larger controlled trials, employing topical nitrate therapy in low intermittent doses for daily life ischemia.

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