Horiuchi Masataka, Tsutsui Masato, Tasaki Hiromi, Morishita Tsuyoshi, Suda Osamu, Nakata Sei, Nihei Shun-ichi, Miyamoto Masaharu, Kouzuma Ryoji, Okazaki Masahiro, Yanagihara Nobuyuki, Adachi Tetsuo, Nakashima Yasuhide
Second Department of Internal Medicine, University of Occupational and Environmental Health, Kitakyushu, Japan.
Arterioscler Thromb Vasc Biol. 2004 Jan;24(1):106-11. doi: 10.1161/01.ATV.0000104240.56460.AB. Epub 2003 Oct 30.
We examined the vascular expression levels of extracellular superoxide dismutase (EC-SOD), a major antioxidant enzyme in the cardiovascular system, in patients with acute coronary syndromes.
Twenty-one consecutive patients with acute myocardial infarction (AMI), 14 patients with unstable angina, 11 patients with stable angina, and 20 control subjects were studied. The levels of vascular EC-SOD expression were assessed by the difference in plasma EC-SOD concentrations before and after intravenous heparan injection. In the patients with AMI, vascular EC-SOD expression (ng/mL) was significantly higher on day 1 after the onset of AMI (148+/-10) as compared with the control subjects (116+/-6, P<0.05). The vascular EC-SOD expression returned to the normal range on day 7 (104+/-8), and that level persisted thereafter. The vascular EC-SOD expression was also significantly higher in the patients with unstable angina (160+/-13) than in those with stable angina (122+/-10) or in the controls (116+/-6) (P<0.05 each). Moreover, in the patients with AMI, higher levels of vascular EC-SOD expression on day 1 were significantly associated with smaller myocardial infarct size (P<0.05).
This is the first clinical demonstration showing that vascular EC-SOD may be upregulated in acute coronary syndromes in humans in vivo. EC-SOD may play an important protective role against increased oxidative stress during acute ischemic coronary events.