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Vitamin E And Aspirin Delay Heart Disease In Mice Even With High Cholesterol Levels
ScienceDaily ^ | Oct. 19 , 2001 | University Of Pennsylvania Medical Center

Posted on 10/19/2001 2:18:39 PM PDT by callisto

Source:   University Of Pennsylvania Medical Center (http://www.med.upenn.edu/)
Date:   Posted 10/19/2001

Vitamin E And Aspirin Delay Heart Disease In Mice Even With High Cholesterol Levels
A combination of the anti-oxidant Vitamin E and a cox inhibitor such as aspirin significantly delays the development of atherosclerosis in mice even when their cholesterol levels remain high, according to research by scientists at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine.

In the study, the production of plaque in the blood vessels of the mice was lowered more than 80 percent, said Domenico Pratico, MD, research assistant professor in Penn's Department of Pharmacology and the lead investigator in the research. The findings are published this week in Circulation, a journal of the American Heart Association.

"We think this is a therapy regimen suitable for clinical trials," Pratico said. "The implication is that if you combine an antioxidant with even a low dose of aspirin, you might be able to obtain primary prevention of atherosclerosis without reducing cholesterol. This is something that might be used by individuals who cannot take cholesterol-reducing medication, and it would be a very inexpensive way to prevent such a deadly disease."

Pratico and his colleagues used a group of mice that had been genetically engineered to produce high cholesterol and atherosclerotic lesions similar to human plaques, in a series of studies that examined how the mammals' cardiovascular systems would respond to Vitamin E and aspirin or similar drugs when they developed the disease.

The first test group was administered a daily dose of Vitamin E that would have equaled 800 units in human subjects. "We found that Vitamin E reduced oxidative stress, which is known to be increased in atherosclerosis, to the point that it was suppressed in the mice," Pratico said. "It also reduced atherosclerosis by 65 percent. And this was accomplished without lowering the cholesterol levels."

When the second test group was administered the same dose of Vitamin E along with a dose of indomethacin that would have equalled 25 milligrams in humans, the results were even more compelling: "We found the synergistic effect from Vitamin E and indomethacin resulted in an 85 percent reduction of atherosclerosis," Pratico said.

"Atherosclersis is a complex disease, and high cholesterol is one of the many factors involved in its pathogenesis. Oxidative stress and inflammation are probably as important as cholesterol, if we can delay or prevent its onset with this combination of drugs," Pratico said. "We now have a scientific basis for evaluating in humans this unexpected therapy in the prevention of such a common and expensive disease."

The work was funded by the National Institutes of Health and the American Heart Association.

Pratico's collaborators in the research included: Tillman Cyrus, MD; Lina X. Tang, B.Sc., and Garret FitzGerald, MD, all of Penn's Center for Experimental Therapeutics, and Joshua Rokach, PhD, of the Claude Pepper Institute of the Florida Institute of Technology in Melbourne, FLA.


Note: This story has been adapted from a news release issued by University Of Pennsylvania Medical Center for journalists and other members of the public. If you wish to quote from any part of this story, please credit University Of Pennsylvania Medical Center as the original source. You may also wish to include the following link in any citation:
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2001/10/011019074431.htm


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1 posted on 10/19/2001 2:18:39 PM PDT by callisto
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To: dirtboy
Bump.
2 posted on 10/19/2001 2:21:37 PM PDT by Stentor
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To: Stentor
Bump.

Dang. I was just getting ready to order a pizza.

With extra cheeeesssseeee...

3 posted on 10/19/2001 2:25:34 PM PDT by dirtboy
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To: dirtboy
go ahead, order that pizza anyway!! enjoy life!
4 posted on 10/19/2001 2:30:18 PM PDT by jb54tx
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To: dirtboy
Never believed in the cholesterol theory, it is just more pc junk science. Enjoy the pizza without guilt.
5 posted on 10/19/2001 2:31:26 PM PDT by ozone1
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To: callisto
I remember about fifteen years ago there was a book published called "The Zero Cholesterol Diet." The silly-@$$ author never researched the effects of "zero cholesterol," and at least one person died and many others ended up with permanent liver damage as a result.

All things in moderation.

6 posted on 10/19/2001 2:36:04 PM PDT by Harrison Bergeron
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To: callisto
Sounds like researchers are getting close to the theory Dr. Paul Linus was working on before he died. (I may have the name wrong.) He was the Nobel prize winner for Chemistry who started the whole Vitamin C craze.
7 posted on 10/19/2001 3:38:18 PM PDT by wjeanw
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