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Clinical Trial Summary

The symptoms and severity of arterial disease is secondary to perfusion deficit. The specific alteration of the mitochondrial function of ischemic skeletal muscle plays an important role, and therapeutic enhancing mitochondrial function are associated with a clinical improvement with increase in the walking distance of the patient.

In severe ischemia, reperfusion required is accompanied by a deleterious episode through a worsening of endothelial dysfunction (impaired pathway of nitric oxide (NO)), majorant alteration of cellular energy and the hormonal and inflammatory responses. This is reperfusion syndrome, which can lead to grave consequences. Our goal is to limit mitochondrial and endothelial dysfunction (increased by the reperfusion) by stimulating the NO pathway by in situ addition of its precursor, L-arginine. Our working hypothesis is that this cellular improvement will be accompanied by an increase in systolic pressure index and an improvement in the walking distance.

Method: This is a trial with direct individual benefit, comparative, randomized, prospective, single-center, double-blind, versus placebo.


Clinical Trial Description

2 groups of 30 patients with severe lower limb ischemia requiring femoropopliteal bypass revascularization participate in the study. The control group (placebo isoosmotic saline) will be compared to the treated group (femoral arterial infusion of 2 g L-Arginine for 30 min).

Heart rate, blood pressure and body temperature will be monitored continuously. The gastrocnemius muscle is biopsied before and 30 minutes after revascularization to analyze mitochondrial respiration and its control. Both femoral and brachial concomitant venous samples will judge the importance of muscle damage (lactate, muscle enzymes) and released mediators (cytokines, NO and endothelin) on the local and general.

Main clinical implications: L-arginine supplementation in atherosclerotic patients requiring femoropopliteal bypass to limit the initial deleterious effects of reperfusion and improve their walking distance and therefore their quality of life. Then extending this treatment to other patients with peripheral arterial disease. ;


Study Design

Allocation: Randomized, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Investigator), Primary Purpose: Prevention


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT02117206
Study type Interventional
Source University Hospital, Strasbourg, France
Contact
Status Completed
Phase Phase 4
Start date November 2005
Completion date November 2013

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