Cardiovascular Diseases Clinical Trial
To test the hypothesis that the aggressive treatment of plasma LDL and oxidized LDL will result in improvements in the activity of ischemia in patients with coronary artery disease and will reverse characteristic cell/vessel wall dysfunctions in the arteries of these patients.
BACKGROUND:
Many of the damaging clinical features of coronary artery disease can be asymptomatic or
present without warning. Active myocardial ischemia is an important functional expression of
coronary atherosclerosis and underlies most of these clinical manifestations. Tests
in-hospital aimed at the assessment of risk can measure the activity of myocardial ischemia
but do not consider ischemia during daily life. Electrocardiographic monitoring in
apparently stable ambulatory patients has shown frequent asymptomatic myocardial ischemia
with many new characteristics not seen in tests performed in-hospital such as the fact that
events are mostly asymptomatic, surprisingly prolonged, not related to stress and show a
diurnal rhythm similar to that reported for myocardial infarction. Out-of-hospital
ambulatory monitoring has shown that asymptomatic ischemia is common and overlooked in the
management of apparently stable patients with coronary disease. If the activity of ischemia
affects prognosis, it may not be sufficient to treat symptoms alone and new goals may be
necessary that aim to control all active ischemia during daily life.
DESIGN NARRATIVE:
The first five years of the grant quantified the activity of myocardial ischemia in
approximately 90 ambulatory patients with coronary artery disease out-of-hospital in order
to: study the natural history of ischemia in relation to the occurrence of coronary events;
examine the effects of all out-of-hospital active ischemia on prognosis; establish if
monitoring of active ischemia provides information about the risk of coronary events apart
from usual testing The longitudinal study characterized patients according to history,
symptoms, risk factors, exercise testing for myocardial ischemia, and cardiac
catheterization data. Serial 48-hour ambulatory monitoring of the electrocardiogram was
performed on and off standard medication at baseline and at six month intervals. The
frequency and duration of all active ischemia out-of-hospital were related in a multivariate
analysis to symptoms, clinical and laboratory data, and to coronary events such as death,
myocardial infarction, hospitalization for unstable angina, and need for revascularization.
Patients were enrolled during the first two years and followed for two to four years.
The grant was renewed in 1996 to test the hypothesis that the aggressive treatment of plasma
LDL and oxidized LDL will result in improvements in the activity of ischemia in patients
with coronary artery disease and will reverse characteristic cell/vessel wall dysfunctions
in the arteries of these patients. Patients will be evaluated in a randomized, double-blind,
placebo-controlled, parallel design trial. Ambulatory ECG monitoring and ultrasonic exam of
endothelium-dependent vasomotion of the brachial artery will be used to measure the activity
of ischemia and arterial dysfunction at baseline and after 12 months of therapy with
standard diet (control group), standard diet plus lovastatin (LDL lowering strategy), or
standard diet, lovastatin and probucol (LDL and oxidized LDL lowering strategy). The study
is not considered to be an NIH-defined Phase III clinical trial.
The study completion date listed in this record was obtained from the "End Date" entered in
the Protocol Registration and Results System (PRS) record.
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