Persistent Inflammatory Activity in Blood Cells and Artery Tissue from Patients with Previous Bare Metal Stent

Studies have pointed out a higher mortality after coronary artery bypass surgery (CABG) in patients with stent. To evaluate inflammatory markers in peripheral blood cells and in coronary artery tissue samples obtained during CABG in patients with stent compared to controls. The case series consisted...

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Published inArquivos brasileiros de cardiologia Vol. 111; no. 2; pp. 134 - 141
Main Authors Farsky, Pedro Silvio, Hirata, Mario H, Arnoni, Renato Tambellini, Almeida, Antonio Flavio Sanches, Issa, Mario, Lima, Paula Helena Ortiz, Higuchi, Maria de Lourdes, Lin-Wang, Hui T
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Brazil Sociedade Brasileira de Cardiologia - SBC 01.08.2018
Sociedade Brasileira de Cardiologia (SBC)
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Summary:Studies have pointed out a higher mortality after coronary artery bypass surgery (CABG) in patients with stent. To evaluate inflammatory markers in peripheral blood cells and in coronary artery tissue samples obtained during CABG in patients with stent compared to controls. The case series consisted of two groups, one with previous stent implantation (n = 41) and one control (n = 26). The expression of the LIGHT, IL-6, ICAM, VCAM, CD40, NFKB, TNF, IFNG genes was analyzed in peripheral blood cells collected preoperatively. The coronary artery was evaluated for: interleukin-6, ICAM, VCAM, CD40, NFKB, TNF-alpha and IFN-gamma by immunohistochemistry. A total of 176 tissue samples were grouped for analysis in: A1- arteries with stent (n = 38); A2- native arteries from patients with stent in another artery (n = 68); and A3- arteries without stent from controls undergoing routinely CABG surgery (n = 70). A significance level of 0.05 was adopted. Patients with stent showed higher TNF (p = 0.03) and lower CD40 gene expression (p = 0.01) in peripheral blood cells than controls without stent. In coronary artery samples, the TNF-alpha protein staining was higher in the group A1, not only in the intima-media layer (5.16 ± 5.05 vs 1.90 ± 2.27; p = 0.02), but also in the adipose tissue (6.69 ± 3.87 vs 2.27 ± 4.00; p < 0.001). Furthermore, group A1 had a higher interleukin-6 protein staining in adipose tissue than group A3 (p = 0.04). We observed a persistently higher systemic TNF expression associated with exacerbated TNF-alpha and interleukin-6 local production in patients with stents. This finding may contribute to a worse clinical outcome.
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ISSN:0066-782X
1678-4170
1678-4170
DOI:10.5935/abc.20180119