Abstract

Cardiovascular disease is the major cause of excessive mortality in patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA). We determined whether endothelial dysfunction characterizes patients with newly diagnosed RA (n=10) compared with normal subjects (control group, n=33) and whether it is reversible with 6 months of anti-inflammatory therapy. Endothelial function was determined by measuring vasodilatory responses to intrabrachial artery infusions of acetylcholine (ACh at 7.5 and 15 microg/min, low and high dose, respectively), an endothelium-dependent vasodilator, and to sodium nitroprusside (SNP, 3 and 10 micro g/min), an endothelium-independent vasodilator. Before treatment, blood flow responses (fold increase in flow) to low-dose SNP were 30% lower in the RA versus the control group (4.1+/-0.4-fold versus 5.9+/-0.5-fold, respectively), and responses to high-dose SNP were 34% lower in the RA group versus the control group (5.1+/-0.6-fold versus 7.7+/-0.7-fold, respectively; P<0.001). The responses to low-dose ACh were 50% lower in the RA group versus the control group (3.0+/-0.5-fold versus 6.6+/-0.7-fold, respectively), and responses to high-dose ACh were 37% lower in the RA group versus the control group (5.0+/-0.4-fold versus 7.9+/-0.8-fold, respectively; P<0.001). After therapy, clinical and laboratory markers of inflammation had significantly decreased. Blood flow responses to ACh increased significantly (P=0.02). We conclude that newly diagnosed patients with RA have vascular dysfunction, which is reversible with successful therapy. Therefore, early suppression of inflammatory activity may reduce long-term vascular damage.

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