Does dipyridamole, with or without exercise training, improve coronary collateralization and myocardial perfusion in male patients with ischaemic cardiomyopathy?
Exercise training potentiates the effects of oral dipyridamole on improving coronary collateralization and myocardial perfusion in patients with ischaemic cardiomyopathy.
AIMS: There is evidence that oral dipyridamole, a nucleoside uptake blocker that increases myocardial adenosine levels, lessens myocardial ischaemia by inducing coronary collateral growth in animal models of ischaemic heart disease. However, whether dipyridamole can exert a similar effect in humans with coronary artery disease is controversial. METHODS AND RESULTS: We studied 30 male patients (mean age 55+/-9 years) with coronary artery disease and left ventricular systolic dysfunction (ejection fraction >40%). Patients were randomized into three matched groups. Group A patients (n=10) received dipyridamole alone at a dose of 75 mg t.i.d. orally for 8 weeks. Group B patients (n=10) underwent exercise training at 60% of peak .VO(2)three times a week for 8 weeks, and received dipyridamole. Group C patients (n=10) had neither exercise testing nor dipyridamole. On study entry and after 8 weeks all patients underwent an exercise test with gas exchange analysis, dobutamine stress echocardiography, 201-thallium planar myocardial scintigraphy, and coronary angiography. Peak .VO(2)increased significantly only in trained patients. Thallium uptake of the collateral-dependent myocardium, coronary collateral score and wall thickening score increased significantly only in groups receiving dipyridamole, the greatest improvement being in group B patients. Plasma adenosine levels were also the highest in group B (P<0.001 vs A and C). Correlations were found between changes in adenosine levels and increases of both thallium uptake (r=-0.70;P=0.001) and collateralization (r=0.72;P=0.001). CONCLUSION: Exercise training potentiates the effects of dipyridamole on coronary collateralization and myocardial perfusion in humans with ischaemic cardiomyopathy.
Romualdo Belardinelli (Sun,) studied this question.