4.8 Article

Allopurinol improves myocardial efficiency in patients with idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy

Journal

CIRCULATION
Volume 104, Issue 20, Pages 2407-2411

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1161/hc4501.098928

Keywords

heart failure; hemodynamics; free radicals

Funding

  1. NHLBI NIH HHS [R01 HL-65455, K08 HL-03238] Funding Source: Medline

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Background-Dilated cardiomyopathy is characterized by an imbalance between left ventricular performance and myocardial energy consumption. Experimental models suggest that oxidative stress resulting from increased xanthine oxidase (XO) activity contributes to this imbalance. Accordingly, we hypothesized that XO inhibition with intracoronary allopurinol improves left ventricular efficiency in patients with idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy. Methods and Results-Patients (n=9; ejection fraction, 29 +/-3%) were instrumented to assess myocardial oxygen consumption (M(V) over doto(2)), peak rate of rise of left ventricular pressure (dP/dt(max)), stroke work (SW), and efficiency (dP/dt(max)/M(V) over doto(2) and SW/M(V) over doto(2)) at baseline and after sequential infusions of intracoronary allopurinol (0.5, 1.0, and 1.5 mg/min, each for 15 minutes). Allopurinol caused a significant decrease in M(V) over doto(2) (peak effect, -16 +/-5%; P <0.01; n=9) with no parallel decrease in dP/dt(max) or SW and no change in ventricular load. The net result was a substantial improvement in myocardial efficiency (peak effects: dP/dt(max)/M(V) over doto(2), 22 +/-9%, n=9; SW/M(V) over doto(2), 40 +/- 17%, n=6; both P <0.05). These effects were apparent despite concomitant treatment with standard heart failure therapy, including ACE inhibitors and beta -blockers. XO and its parent enzyme xanthine dehydrogenase were more abundant in failing explanted human myocardium on immunoblot. Conclusions-These findings indicate that XO activity may contribute to abnormal energy metabolism in human cardiomyopathy. By reversing the energetic inefficiency of the failing heart, pharmacological XO inhibition represents a potential novel therapeutic strategy for the treatment of human heart failure.

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