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The ratio of ADP- to ATP-ectonucleotidase activity is reduced in patients with coronary artery disease

El-Omar, Magdi M; Islam, Naziba; Broekman, M Johan; Drosopoulos, Joan H F; Roa, Donald C; Lorin, Jeffrey D; Sedlis, Steven P; Olson, Kim E; Pulte, E Dianne; Marcus, Aaron J
INTRODUCTION: CD39 (NTPDase1), an endothelial cell membrane glycoprotein, is the predominant ATP diphosphohydrolase (ATPDase) in vascular endothelium. It hydrolyses both triphosphonucleosides and diphosphonucleosides at comparable rates, thus terminating platelet aggregation and recruitment responses to ADP and other platelet agonists. This occurs even when nitric oxide (NO) formation and prostacyclin production are inhibited. Thus, CD39 represents the main control system for platelet reactivity. Reduced or deficient local ecto-nucleotidase activity may predispose to development of vascular disease. Based on data in animal models and in vitro, CD39 constitutes a new therapeutic modality for vascular disease with a novel and unique mode of action. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Lymphocytes were isolated from 46 patients with angiographically proven coronary artery disease (CAD) as well as from matched healthy control subjects. Ectonucleotidase ADPase and ATPase activities (prototypical for the ATPDase activity of endothelial cells) were measured using established radio-TLC procedures. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION: In the patients, a decreased ratio of ADPase to ATPase activities (from 1.26 to 1.04) was observed despite increases in both ADPase and ATPase activities. Coronary artery disease was the only independent predictor of a difference in the ADPase/ATPase activity ratio by multivariate linear regression analysis (P=0.0035). This altered ADPase/ATPase activity ratio in patients may represent a reduction in endogenous defense systems against platelet-driven thrombotic events. These data may identify a population of patients with excessive platelet reactivity in their circulation. Increased generation of prothrombotic ADP in these patients implies a potential benefit from therapeutic intervention with soluble forms of CD39
PMID: 15935828
ISSN: 0049-3848
CID: 56106

Successful revascularization of a long chronic total occlusion with blunt microdissection complicated by coronary artery dissection [Case Report]

Lorin, Jeffrey D; Boglioli, Jason R; Sedlis, Steven P
We report a case of successful percutaneous revascularization of a chronic total occlusion using the LuMend Frontrunner catheter. The case was complicated by a long coronary artery dissection, with inability to access the true lumen. With favorable healing at 7 weeks, the true lumen was accessible which led to procedural success
PMID: 15550746
ISSN: 1042-3931
CID: 48040

Rapid thrombectomy for treatment of macroembolization during percutaneous coronary intervention in the setting of acute myocardial infarction [Case Report]

Lorin, Jeffrey D; Liou, Michael C; Sedlis, Steven P
We report the use of the Export catheter as an urgent modality to aspirate thrombus that embolized down the left anterior descending artery during acute myocardial infarction
PMID: 12772245
ISSN: 1522-1946
CID: 42667

ATP/ADP ectonucleotidase activity is increased in patients with coronary artery disease [Meeting Abstract]

El-Omar, MM; Islam, N; Broekman, MJ; Drosopoulos, JHF; Roa, DC; Lorin, J; Sedlis, SP; Marcus, AJ
ISI:000179184701933
ISSN: 0006-4971
CID: 37108

Percutaneous coronary intervention versus coronary bypass graft surgery for diabetic patients with unstable angina and risk factors for adverse outcomes with bypass: outcome of diabetic patients in the AWESOME randomized trial and registry

Sedlis, Steven P; Morrison, Douglass A; Lorin, Jeffrey D; Esposito, Rick; Sethi, Gulshan; Sacks, Jerome; Henderson, William; Grover, Frederick; Ramanathan, K B; Weiman, Darryl; Saucedo, Jorge; Antakli, Tamim; Paramesh, Venki; Pett, Stuart; Vernon, Sarah; Birjiniuk, Vladimir; Welt, Frederick; Krucoff, Mitchell; Wolfe, Walter; Lucke, John C; Mediratta, Sundeep; Booth, David; Murphy, Edward; Ward, Herbert; Miller, LaWayne; Kiesz, Stefan; Barbiere, Charles; Lewis, Dan
OBJECTIVES: This study compared survival after percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) with survival after coronary artery bypass graft surgery (CABG) among diabetics in the Veterans Affairs AWESOME (Angina With Extremely Serious Operative Mortality Evaluation) study randomized trial and registry of high-risk patients. BACKGROUND: Previous studies indicate that CABG may be superior to PCI for diabetics, but no comparisons have been made for diabetics at high risk for surgery. METHODS: Over five years (1995 to 2000), 2,431 patients with medically refractory myocardial ischemia and at least one of five risk factors (prior CABG, myocardial infarction within seven days, left ventricular ejection fraction <0.35, age >70 years, or an intra-aortic balloon being required to stabilize) were identified. A total of 781 were acceptable for CABG and PCI, and 454 consented to be randomized. The 1,650 patients not acceptable for both CABG and PCI constitute the physician-directed registry, and the 327 who were acceptable but refused to be randomized constitute the patient-choice registry. Diabetes prevalence was 32% (144) among randomized patients, 27% (89) in the patient-choice registry, and 32% (525) in the physician-directed registry. The CABG and PCI survival rates were compared using Kaplan-Meier curves and log-rank tests. RESULTS: The respective CABG and PCI 36-month survival rates for diabetic patients were 72% and 81% for randomized patients, 85% and 89% for patient-choice registry patients, and 73% and 71% for the physician-directed registry patients. None of the differences was statistically significant. CONCLUSIONS: We conclude that PCI is a relatively safe alternative to CABG for diabetic patients with medically refractory unstable angina who are at high risk for CABG
PMID: 12427406
ISSN: 0735-1097
CID: 69446

The right radial approach for stenting of lesions in the right coronary artery with anomalous take-off from the left sinus of valsalva [Case Report]

Lorin, J D; Robin, B; Lochow, P; Lorenzo, A; Sedlis, S P
Angioplasty and stenting of lesions located in anomalous right coronary arteries arising from the left sinus of Valsalva is technically challenging. We suggest that the right radial artery provides a more direct approach that is particularly advantageous in such cases and include illustrative case reports
PMID: 10973375
ISSN: 1042-3931
CID: 114785

Dobutamine stress testing in the cardiac catheterization laboratory

Sedlis SP; Lorin J; Matalon A; Chandrasekaran S; Gold J; Santini C; Negron M; Kumar K; Steinberg EH
Dobutamine stress ventriculography is a safe test that appears to separate groups of patients with and without significant coronary artery stenoses. In this study, all 7 patients with significant coronary artery stenoses who reached a heart rate > or = 110 beats/min had a positive stress test, whereas 9 of 10 control patients had a negative stress test
PMID: 8759816
ISSN: 0002-9149
CID: 12574

EFFECTS OF PENTOXYFYLLINE ON HEPATIC HEMODYNAMICS [Meeting Abstract]

WEINSHEL, EH; LORIN, JD; SEDLIS, SP; RAICHT, RF
ISI:A1994NH90904004
ISSN: 0016-5085
CID: 52459