Endothelium and hemorheology
Issue title: Selected proceedings of the 12th European Conference on Clinical Hemorheology, 22‐26 June 2003, Sofia, Bulgaria
Article type: Research Article
Authors: Turchetti, V. | Boschi, L. | Donati, G. | Borgogni, G. | Coppola, D. | Dragoni, S. | Bellini, M.A. | Sicuro, S. | Mastronuzzi, V.M.A. | Forconi, S.
Affiliations: Department of Internal, Cardiovascular and Geriatric Medicine, University of Siena, Italy
Note: [] Corresponding author: Prof. Vera Turchetti, Dipartimento di Medicina Interna, Cardiovascolare e Geriatrica, Università degli Studi di Siena, Policlinico Santa Maria alle Scotte – Viale Bracci, 53100 Siena, Italy. Tel.: +39 0577 585355; Fax: +39 0577 233318; E‐mail: [email protected].
Abstract: Hemorheological alterations which can be found in ischaemic vascular diseases are well known and widely studied; less clear is the relationship between these alterations and endothelial function. Our studies showed that modifications in endothelial function caused by physical stress are associated with a worsening in hemorheological parameters mainly in patients affected by ischaemic vascular diseases: major vascular alterations have been found in patients with very high levels of plasma markers endothelial dysfunction. The control of the basal tone of the vessels is given by the complex interaction between vasoconstrictor and vasodilator endothelial factors and when this equilibrium is broken we have the endothelial dysfunction. From a methodological point of view we can find an endothelial dysfunction index determining the various substances produced by the endothelium, but it is very difficult to have a value which clearly identifies the real state of the endothelial alteration. The function of the NO, which is one of the more powerful endogenous vasodilators and whose synthesis is catalysed by nitric oxide synthase (NOS), can be determined by the ratio between blood concentrations of citrulline and arginine (the co‐product and the precursor of the way of NO synthesis), which represents the level of activity of the enzyme. A very affordable index of the endothelial dysfunction is the asymmetric dimethylarginine (ADMA), a powerful endogenous inhibitor of NOS; in fact several studies demonstrated a strong relationship between ischaemic vascular diseases and high levels of plasma ADMA. Evaluation of these parameters is measured by means of high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC): this technique provides very affordable results and allows to obtain evaluations of substances in very small concentrations, like ADMA.
Journal: Clinical Hemorheology and Microcirculation, vol. 30, no. 3-4, pp. 289-295, 2004