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1.
Eur Cardiol ; 13(2): 104-111, 2018 Dec.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30697354

RESUMO

Treatment goals for people with chronic angina should focus on the relief of symptoms and improving mortality rates so the patient can feel better and live longer. The traditional haemodynamic approach to ischaemic heart disease was based on the assumption that increasing oxygen supply and decreasing oxygen demand would improve symptoms. However, data from clinical trials, show that about one third of people continue to have angina despite a successful percutaneous coronary intervention and medical therapy. Moreover, several trials on chronic stable angina therapy and revascularisation have failed to show benefits in terms of primary outcome (survival, cardiovascular death, all-cause mortality), symptom relief or echocardiographic parameters. Failure to significantly improve quality of life and prognosis may be attributed in part to a limited understanding of ischaemic heart disease, by neglecting the fact that ischaemia is a metabolic disorder. Shifting cardiac metabolism from free fatty acids towards glucose is a promising approach for the treatment of patients with stable angina, independent of the underlying disease (macrovascular and/or microvascular disease). Cardiac metabolic modulators open the way to a greater understanding of ischaemic heart disease and its common clinical manifestations as an energetic disorder rather than an imbalance between the demand and supply of oxygen and metabolites.

2.
Acute Card Care ; 13(1): 52-4, 2011 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21323408

RESUMO

Late stent thrombosis represents a life-threatening event, usually triggered by inadequate antiplatelet therapy and promoted by multiple risk factors, such as stenting of a chronic total occlusion, overlapping stenting, an abnormal vascular response to the eluted drug, stent malapposition and stent fracture. A 57-year-old man with aspirin hypersensitivity underwent successful percutaneous revascularization of a chronic total occlusion of the left anterior descending artery (LAD). He received two sirolimus-eluting stents overlapping for 2 mm and was discharged on clopidogrel and picotamide. Two years later, 15 days after clopidogrel discontinuation, he experienced an anterior ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction and underwent rescue percutaneous LAD thrombectomy after unsuccessful fibrinolysis. Coronary angiography showed fracture of the distal stent, with a 5 mm gap between the two portions, as well as severe late stent malapposition, confirmed by optical coherence tomography. Despite treatment with clopidogrel and picotamide, in the following days the patient experienced two new episodes of stent thrombosis, treated with thrombectomy and deployment of bioengineered stents. The patient underwent successful oral aspirin desensitization, with a complete in vitro inhibition of platelet function, and was discharged on aspirin, clopidogrel and warfarin, without experiencing other events at 6-month follow-up.


Assuntos
Aspirina/efeitos adversos , Trombose Coronária/etiologia , Hipersensibilidade a Drogas/etiologia , Stents Farmacológicos/efeitos adversos , Inibidores da Agregação Plaquetária/efeitos adversos , Falha de Prótese , Angioplastia Coronária com Balão , Clopidogrel , Oclusão Coronária/terapia , Humanos , Masculino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Recidiva , Ticlopidina/efeitos adversos , Ticlopidina/análogos & derivados , Fatores de Tempo , Tomografia de Coerência Óptica
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