Intermittent Claudication: New Targets for Drug Development

被引:0
|
作者
Eric P. Brass
机构
[1] Harbor-UCLA Medical Center,Department of Medicine and the Center for Clinical Pharmacology
来源
Drugs | 2013年 / 73卷
关键词
Exercise Training; Carnitine; Pentoxifylline; Peripheral Artery Disease; Cilostazol;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Peripheral artery disease (PAD) is the result of extensive atherosclerosis in the arterial supply to the lower extremities. PAD is associated with increased systemic cardiovascular morbidity and mortality as well as substantial disability due to walking impairment. Claudication is the classic symptom of leg pain with walking that is relieved by rest, but patients with PAD without typical claudication also have a walking limitation. Treatment of the patient with PAD is directed towards reducing cardiovascular risk and improving exercise capacity. The pathophysiology of the physical impairment is complex as changes in the muscle distal to the arterial stenoses contribute to the limitations. Current treatment options to improve exercise performance have limitations emphasizing the need for new pharmacotherapies for this highly prevalent condition. The multifactorial contributors to the exercise impairment in PAD suggest potential targets for novel drug therapies. Advances in understanding angiogenesis make pharmacologic revascularization possible. However, ensuring that new blood vessels develop in a distribution relevant to the clinical impairment remains a challenge. Skeletal muscle metabolism and its regulation are altered in patients with PAD and strategies to improve the efficient oxidation of fuel substrates may improve muscle function. PAD is associated with increased oxidative stress which may result in injury to the muscle microvasculature and myocyte. Minimizing this oxidative stress by enhancing cellular defense mechanisms, administration of anti-inflammatory agents or by providing antioxidants, could prevent oxidative injury. Given the central role of atherosclerosis in the flow limitation, therapies to induce regression of atherosclerotic lesions could result in improved blood flow and oxygen delivery. Drugs targeting the distribution of blood flow in the microcirculatory environment of the muscle have the potential to better match oxygen delivery with working myocytes. The physical disability and flow limitations contribute to a loss of leg muscle mass in patients with PAD. Drugs to increase muscle mass and strength could enhance walking ability in these patients. Pharmacotherapies that recapitulate the muscle adaptations induced by preconditioning may result in improved physical performance in patients with PAD. Adjunctive therapies combined with exercise training or revascularization may be important given the complexity of integrative muscle function and the multiple pathologic changes induced by PAD. New research into the pathophysiology of the physical impairment associated with PAD has identified potential new targets for drug therapy, and will likely continue to do so in the years to come. Translation of these opportunities into effective therapeutics will be important as the already high prevalence of PAD is expected to increase as the population ages.
引用
收藏
页码:999 / 1014
页数:15
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Drug Treatment of Intermittent Claudication
    Douglas Jacoby
    Emile R. Mohler
    Drugs, 2004, 64 : 1657 - 1670
  • [2] Pharmacologic Therapy for Intermittent Claudication
    Dobesh, Paul P.
    Stacy, Zachary A.
    Persson, Emily L.
    PHARMACOTHERAPY, 2009, 29 (05): : 526 - 553
  • [3] Cilostazol for intermittent claudication
    Brown, Tamara
    Forster, Rachel B.
    Cleanthis, Marcus
    Mikhailidis, Dimitri P.
    Stansby, Gerard
    Stewart, Marlene
    COCHRANE DATABASE OF SYSTEMATIC REVIEWS, 2021, (06):
  • [4] Intermittent claudication
    Alan T. Hirsch
    Laura M. Reich
    Current Treatment Options in Cardiovascular Medicine, 2001, 3 (3) : 167 - 180
  • [5] Multicriteria decision analysis for determining drug therapy for intermittent claudication
    Encinas, MP
    Fernández, MA
    Martín, ML
    Calvo, MV
    Gómez-Alonso, A
    Dominguez-Gil, A
    Lozano, F
    METHODS AND FINDINGS IN EXPERIMENTAL AND CLINICAL PHARMACOLOGY, 1998, 20 (05): : 425 - 431
  • [6] Conservative treatment for patients with intermittent claudication
    Sugimoto, I.
    Ohta, T.
    Ishibashi, H.
    Iwata, H.
    Yamada, T.
    Tadakoshi, M.
    Hida, N.
    Orimoto, Y.
    INTERNATIONAL ANGIOLOGY, 2010, 29 (02) : 55 - 60
  • [7] Pentoxifylline for intermittent claudication
    Salhiyyah, Kareem
    Forster, Rachel
    Senanayake, Eshan
    Abdel-Hadi, Mohammed
    Booth, Andrew
    Michaels, Jonathan A.
    COCHRANE DATABASE OF SYSTEMATIC REVIEWS, 2015, (09):
  • [8] Naftidrofuryl for intermittent claudication
    de Backer, Tine L. M.
    Vander Stichele, Robert
    Lehert, Philippe
    Van Bortel, Luc
    COCHRANE DATABASE OF SYSTEMATIC REVIEWS, 2012, (12):
  • [9] Pentoxifylline for intermittent claudication
    Salhiyyah, Kareem
    Senanayake, Eshan
    Abdel-Hadi, Mohammed
    Booth, Andrew
    Michaels, Jonathan A.
    COCHRANE DATABASE OF SYSTEMATIC REVIEWS, 2012, (01):
  • [10] Cilostazol for intermittent claudication
    Bedenis, Rachel
    Stewart, Marlene
    Cleanthis, Marcus
    Robless, Peter
    Mikhailidis, Dimitri P.
    Stansby, Gerard
    COCHRANE DATABASE OF SYSTEMATIC REVIEWS, 2014, (10):