Asthma Clinical Trial
Official title:
Prevalence of Allergic Diseases and Atopy in Patients With Angiographically Confirmed Coronary Artery Disease
The purpose of this study is to estimate the prevalence of allergic diseases and atopy among patients with angiographically confirmed coronary artery disease as well as to assess levels of serum allergic inflammation markers in this population.
Cardiovascular disease (CVD) is one of the leading causes of death, disability and medical
resources use worldwide. Atherosclerosis remains the basic pathology found in CVD. Based on
theoretical knowledge and animal experimental models it can be hypothesized that allergic
inflammation affects atherosclerotic plaque formation/disruption. The exact nature of such
interaction remains unknown.
The process most probably takes place at the molecular level and involves both: specific
interleukin formation and mast cells recruitment. On the one hand some pro-allergic
interleukins have been found to inhibit atherosclerotic plaque formation in experimental
animal models. However, other hypothesis conclude that mediators released by mast cells
might encourage hypoxemia of the heart muscle cells and thus promote their necrosis. Mast
cells and eosinophils -typically associated with allergy - are both found in human heart
muscle, cross sections of coronary arteries and atherosclerotic plaques.
Atopic patients who are prone to IgE-mediated mast cell activation seem to run a lower risk
of sudden cardiac death after myocardial infarction. It may be associated with the fact that
atopy produces a mild haemostatic imbalance similar to that typical of aspirin - moderately
long bleeding time, depressed platelet aggregability and delayed generation of thrombin in
clotting blood. Tryptase, one of the mediators released from mast cells widely used marker
of anaphylaxis, has recently been shown to be increased in sera of patients with
angiographically significant narrowings in coronary arteries. These results are in
accordance with the previous finding of increased total IgE (antibody involved in type I
allergic reaction) post myocardial infarction. Allergic myocardial infarction (also known as
Kounis syndrome) - a condition in which heart muscle ischemia results from allergic insult
sometimes even in the absence of permanent coronary artery lesions - is another hint
supporting the hypothesis of possible interaction between allergy and cardiovascular
diseases.
Despite relatively many reports studying the association at molecular, in vitro and clinical
level, the research investigating the problem as a whole, connecting laboratory data with
clinical picture, is scarce. Our research aims at providing epidemiological evidence on the
prevalence of allergy and atopy as well as serum allergy markers profile in subjects with
coronary artery disease.
Our study is dedicated to post-coronary angiography subjects willing to express informed
consent for study participation.
Coronarography has been chosen as a verification tool for several reasons:
- it gives more accurate diagnosis of clinically relevant coronary narrowings than basic
ECG, ECG exercise test or coronary angioCT
- it enables the distinction between typical angina pectoris and Prinzmetal's angina
- it has become a common procedure in Poland giving a relatively large and diverse cohort
of patients undergoing the procedure whom we could address
;
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