Abstract

Abstract Background The extent of cardiac injury in ST elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) depends on the level of inflammation and subsequent immune cell recruitment. An inflammatory phase that is disproportionately prolonged, of excessive magnitude, or insufficiently suppressed, can lead to sustained tissue damage and improper healing, promoting infarct expansion, adverse remodelling and chamber dilatation. Soluble TNF receptor 1 (sTNFR-1) is believed to mirror systemic pan-inflammatory status more closely than a single cytokine antigenic level. sTNFR-1 levels might give prognostic information, independent from and, at the same time, additive with some well-recognized outcome predictors such as left ventricular ejection fraction. Purpose We hypothesised that sTNFR-1 and other inflammatory markers could be modulated by statins. Methods Plasma levels of inflammatory markers were measured at baseline, 2 days, 7 days and 2 months in consecutive patients with first time STEMI with single vessel disease. Twenty-five patients (treatment group (TG)) were treated with 80 mg Rosuvastatin daily with first dose before primary percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) whereas the control group (CG) consisted of 34 patients in whom treatment with 20 mg simvastatin daily were initiated the day after PPCI. Results sTNFR1 increased during the first 48 hours following PCI and this increase was larger in the CG compared with the TG (0.22±0.30 ng/mL vs 0.08±0.19 ng/nmL, p=0.025). The difference in increase during one week was only borderline statistically significant (0.21±0.30 ng/mL vs 0.08±0.26 ng/mL, p=0.081). These differences in the kinetics of sTNRF-1 were mirrored by changes in Pentraxin 3 (PTX3) between groups from baseline to 1 week, CG vs TG. (0.28±0.70 μmol/l vs 0.10±0.05 ng/mL, p=0.014) and at 2 months (−0.42±0.56 ng/mL vs 0.08±0.60 μmol/l, p=0.032) Conclusion High dose Rosuvastatin therapy initiated peri-procedural during PPCI for STEMI reduces pan inflammation as reflected by sTNFR1 and is associated with a less abrupt fall in PTX3 at 1 week and 2 months supporting recent research suggesting that PTX3 plays a cardiovascular protective effect in cardiovascular disease and healing. Acknowledgement/Funding Western Norway Regional Health Authority

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call