Affiliation:
1. From Ahmanson Biological Imaging Clinic/Nuclear Medicine, Department of Molecular and Medical Pharmacology and Department of Physiology (F.D.M.), UCLA School of Medicine and Laboratory of Structural Biology & Molecular Medicine, University of California, Los Angeles.
Abstract
Background
—The effect of long-term smoking on coronary vasomotion and vasodilator capacity in healthy smokers is unknown.
Methods and Results
—Myocardial blood flow (MBF) was quantified with [
13
N]ammonia and positron emission tomography (PET) at rest, during cold pressor testing (endothelium-dependent vasomotion), and during dipyridamole-induced hyperemia in 16 long-term smokers and 17 nonsmokers. MBF at rest did not differ between the 2 groups. Cold induced similar increases in rate-pressure product (RPP) in smokers and nonsmokers. However, MBF increased only in nonsmokers and was, during cold, higher than in smokers (0.91±0.18 versus 0.78±0.14 mL · g
−1
· min
−1
,
P
<0.05). MBF normalized to the RPP (derived from the ratio of MBF ([milliliters per gram per minute] to RPP [beats per minute times millimeters of mercury] times 10 000) declined in smokers but remained unchanged in nonsmokers (0.86±0.10 versus 0.72±0.11,
P
=0.0006, and 0.99±0.25 versus 0.96±0.27,
P
=NS). The hyperemic response to dipyridamole and the myocardial flow reserve did not differ between the 2 groups. In a multiple regression model adjusted for age, sex, serum lipid levels, years of smoking, and pack-years, years of smoking was the strongest predictor of the normalized blood flow response to cold (
P
<0.001), followed by the HDL/LDL ratio.
Conclusions
—The normal hyperemic response to dipyridamole in long-term smokers indicates a preserved endothelium-independent coronary vascular smooth muscle relaxation, whereas the abnormal response to cold suggests a defect in coronary vasomotion likely located at the level of the coronary endothelium. Its severity depends on the total exposure time to smoking.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Subject
Physiology (medical),Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine
Cited by
147 articles.
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