Status and phase
Conditions
Treatments
About
In ASCOT study, lipid lowering with a statin provided additional beneficial effects in hypertensive patients with average levels of serum total cholesterol. However, the underlying mechanism of statins to improve clinical outcomes in hypertension is unclear and the effect of statins on coronary flow reserve (CFR) has not been examined in hypertensive patients. Therefore, it is clinically important and timely project to measure CFR non-invasively using echocardiography and to elucidate the mechanism of clinical benefits of statins in hypertensive patients with cardiovascular risk. The investigators try to evaluate the effect of rosuvastatin on CFR by measuring the change of CFR after 1 year treatment of rosuvastatin, and to correlate CFR with LDL-cholesterol and CRP.
Full description
In hypertensive patients with high risk, lipid lowering with a statin provided additional beneficial effects in hypertensive patients with average levels of serum total cholesterol. However, the underlying mechanism of statins to improve clinical outcomes in hypertension is unclear. In patients with hypercholesterolemia or coronary atherosclerosis, several studies reported that level of LDL-cholesterol was inversely correlated with coronary blood flow reserve and suggested that statin improved coronary blood flow. Although it is speculated that statin may improve coronary blood flow by decreasing LDL cholesterol level and stabilizing atherosclerotic plaque in coronary atherosclerosis, the effect of statins on coronary flow reserve (CFR) has not been examined in hypertensive patients.
LDL cholesterol is expected to significantly decrease when rosuvastatin 20mg is administered. In addition to LDL-cholesterol lowering effect, the stabilization of atherosclerotic plaque and the regression of atheroma are observed during rosuvastatin treatment. Because of these beneficial effects of rosuvastatin, it may be expected that rosuvastatin will improve coronary blood flow even in hypertensive patients without hypercholesterolemia and the efficacy of rosuvastatin on CFR needs to be investigated in hypertensive patients with cardiovascular risk.
Morphologic assessment for the measurement of coronary lumen in the invasive coronary angiography is used as a gold standard to assess the stenosis in coronary diseases. However, as decrease of myocardial blood flow due to coronary artery disease could not be exactly evaluated by morphologic stenosis, the functional test was required to assess the significance of coronary artery stenosis, and CFR could be directly measured using Doppler guide wire since mid-1990s. Since the pathophysiological implication of coronary stenosis can be assessed using CFR measurement, CFR value is widely used in clinical practice as a very useful indicator to assess coronary stenosis severity in performing percutaneous coronary intervention. As a high frequency transducer with excellent resolution has been used, coronary artery can be directly imaged, and coronary flow velocity can be measured using echo-Doppler technique. As a result, CFR is easily measured in an echocardiography lab which could be measured only in a cardiac catheterization lab using Doppler guide wire in the past. It was confirmed that CFR values obtained by Doppler technique were same as those invasively obtained in a cardiac catheterization lab. The clinical usefulness and accuracy of the technique have been verified also in the diagnosis of coronary artery disease.
Therefore, it is clinically important and timely project to measure CFR non-invasively using echocardiography and to elucidate the mechanism of clinical benefits of statins in hypertensive patients with cardiovascular risk. We try to evaluate the effect of rosuvastatin on CFR by measuring the change of CFR after 1 year treatment of rosuvastatin, and to correlate CFR with LDL-cholesterol and CRP.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
56 participants in 1 patient group
Loading...
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal