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  • Amiprilose in the prevention of restenosis after coronary intervention in a swine model.

Amiprilose in the prevention of restenosis after coronary intervention in a swine model.

Coronary artery disease (1993-03-01)
W C Grinstead, G P Rodgers, W Mazur, D M Cromeens, B A French, M S West, A E Raizner
ABSTRACT

Amiprilose hydrochloride is a synthetic carbohydrate with anti-inflammatory and antiproliferative properties. This study tested the potential benefit of amiprilose in preventing coronary artery restenosis in a swine model. The swine restenosis model was prepared using Hanford miniature swine made atherosclerotic with coronary abrasion, high-fat and high-cholesterol feeding, and intracoronary stenting. Eighteen animals were randomized to receive amiprilose, 100 mg/kg body weight orally twice per day (n = 9), or no amiprilose (n = 9) beginning 5 days before stenting and continuing through 4 weeks until sacrifice. Presacrifice quantitative coronary angiography and postsacrifice histologic examination revealed the degree of intimal proliferation. Coronary angiography revealed no difference in percentage-diameter stenosis between the amiprilose and control groups (left anterior descending artery [LAD], 46% +/- 10% vs 44% +/- 17%; circumflex artery [CFX], 43% +/- 21% vs 42% +/- 15%; right coronary artery [RCA], 37% +/- 11% vs 34% +/- 9%; P = not significant [NS]), respectively, or in change in lumen diameter from poststenting to presacrifice (LAD, -1.0 +/- 0.4 mm vs -1.1 +/- 0.7 mm; CFX, -1.2 +/- 0.8 mm vs -1.0 +/- 0.7 mm; RCA, -1.1 +/- 0.4 mm vs -1.0 +/- 0.4 mm; P = NS). Morphometric histologic analysis likewise showed no difference in percentage-area stenosis (LAD, 55% +/- 14% vs 55% +/- 15%; CFX, 53% +/- 15% vs 54% +/- 12%; RCA, 39% +/- 17% vs 39% +/- 20%; P = NS) or in maximal intimal thickness. Amiprilose hydrochloride did not prevent coronary intimal proliferation in this swine model of restenosis.