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Ischemia/Reperfusion Injury of Human Endothelium: Role of Glucose and Statins

US Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) logo

US Department of Veterans Affairs (VA)

Status

Completed

Conditions

Hyperglycemia

Treatments

Drug: Sevoflurane
Drug: 5% dextrose
Drug: Simvastatin
Drug: Vitamin C

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other U.S. Federal agency

Identifiers

NCT00995670
CARA-023-09S

Details and patient eligibility

About

Anesthetic preconditioning (APC, a brief exposure to an anesthetic gas) has become an area of intense research interest because of its ability to protect tissue and organs from injury resulting from a cessation of blood flow and then a re-establishment of flow. The blood vessel lining plays a key role in this injury. This research will examine, in human volunteers, several important modifiers of APC in human blood vessels: high blood sugar, vitamin C, and statin drugs. Thus, the proposed studies will advance the investigators' understanding of mechanisms of this injury in humans and explore important modifiers of APC protection from injury.

Full description

Injury to vital organs and tissue can occur when blood flow is stopped and then re-established. This happens in a variety of clinical situations and contributes to poor outcomes. A newer concept of protection from this injury by an anesthetic drug might occur because of the effect of the volatile anesthetics on the tissue that lines blood vessels. Thus, a brief exposure to a volatile anesthetic before a cessation of blood flow, called anesthetic preconditioning (APC), can substantially reduce the resulting injury to the lining of the blood vessels. In animal models, high levels of blood sugar block this protection, while cholesterol lowering drugs (statins) restore the protection and may independently protect blood vessel lining from injury. The interactions of high blood sugar and statin drugs on the blood vessel reaction to APC and a subsequent 20-min cessation of blood flow to the forearm will be studied in humans. In addition, the involvement of reactive oxygen species (ROS) in the harmful effects of high blood sugar and the beneficial effects of statins will be explored. The following four hypotheses will be studied: 1) high blood sugar blocks the anesthetic protection of blood vessels from injury in a dose and time dependent manner; 2) reactive oxygen species are involved in the inhibition of APC by high blood sugar; 3) statins modulate injury in a dose related manner; and 4) statins reduce high blood sugar inhibition of APC.

A standard model to evaluate forearm blood vessel function will be used. Thin rubber-band-like strain gauges will be strapped around each forearm and the change in their stretch during a variety of interventions on the experimental arm (the other arm will not receive any interventions and will be the control arm) will be measured. These interventions will allow the investigator to determine whether the hypotheses listed above are true. During all studies, there will be a 20-min arrest of the forearm circulation. Additional effects of injury, APC, high blood sugar, and statins will be determined by evaluating blood vessel inflammatory responses from "markers" in blood samples taken before and after I/R injury. Several studies will involve varying the forearm blood glucose concentration for brief (30 min) to longer (2 hours) periods prior to APC and injury. The ROS scavenger vitamin C will be used to evaluate the role of ROS in adverse effects of high blood sugar. There are several other studies that will continue to seek the mechanism of action of this effect via the use of other drug interactions.

Enrollment

59 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 35 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Young, healthy volunteers, 18-35 yr of age;
  • Females will be studied at the same phase of their estrous cycle in each protocol.

Exclusion criteria

  • Beta-blocker therapy or any medication that might interfere with vascular responses;
  • Pregnant or lactating women;
  • Substance abusers;
  • Smokers;
  • Anyone with cardiovascular, renal, or other systemic disease including hypertension and/or diabetes;
  • Also excluded are volunteers with family history of malignant hyperthermia, or significant gastro-esophageal reflux.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Basic Science

Allocation

Non-Randomized

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

59 participants in 3 patient groups

Sevoflurane and Glucose
Experimental group
Description:
Endothelial function will be measured via forearm blood flow (FBF). Subjects may get I/R injury (ischemia) without glucose or sevoflurane (placebo); I/R with glucose only (glucose trial); I/R with sevoflurane only (sevo trial); I/R with glucose and sevoflurane (combo trial). Baseline FBF was taken in every trial before any intervention, and FBF was taken during intervention and post I/R. Glucose: 5% dextrose will be infused at 12 ml/hr to a target of 200 mg/dl blood concentration in the experimental forearm for 1 hr to prevent the anesthetic preconditioning (sevoflurane) protection against subsequent I/R injury. Sevoflurane: 1 minimum alveolar concentration (MAC) for 20 min (after 1 hr glucose and before I/R) 26 volunteers were studied 67 times in this arm.
Treatment:
Drug: 5% dextrose
Drug: Sevoflurane
Vitamin C and Glucose
Experimental group
Description:
To determine if vitamin C can restore the impairment of the endothelium (FBF) caused by the glucose (dextrose infusion). All subjects received glucose and I/R injury (ischemia), either with or without vitamin C. Control baseline FBF was taken in every trial before any intervention, and FBF was taken during intervention and post I/R. Placebo data were the placebo studies from the Sevoflurane and Glucose arm, when appropriate; new subjects (not enrolled in Sevoflurane and Glucose arm) underwent a separate placebo trial. Glucose: 5% dextrose will be infused at 12ml/hr to a target of 200 mg/dl blood concentration in the experimental forearm for 60 min. Vitamin C: 1 gm iv bolus injection 5 min before I/R injury 16 volunteers were studied 25 times in this arm.
Treatment:
Drug: Vitamin C
Drug: 5% dextrose
Statins and Glucose
Experimental group
Description:
Volunteers ingested a 40 mg simvastatin (statin) pill for the two evenings prior to study day and the morning of the study to determine the effect of simvastatin on modulating the I/R injury during hyperglycemia (high glucose). Volunteers were studied with statin alone and with statin and glucose. Placebo data were the placebo studies from the Sevoflurane and Glucose arm, when appropriate; new subjects (not enrolled in Sevoflurane and Glucose arm) underwent a separate placebo trial. Glucose: 5% dextrose will be infused at 12ml/hr to a target of 200 mg/dl blood concentration in the experimental forearm for 60 min. Statin: 40 mg of simvastatin 17 volunteers were studied 31 times in this arm.
Treatment:
Drug: Simvastatin
Drug: 5% dextrose

Trial contacts and locations

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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