INSULIN-LIKE GROWTH-FACTOR-I, INSULIN, AND ANGINA-PECTORIS SECONDARY TO CORONARY ATHEROSCLEROSIS, VASOSPASM, AND SYNDROME-X

Citation
He. Botker et al., INSULIN-LIKE GROWTH-FACTOR-I, INSULIN, AND ANGINA-PECTORIS SECONDARY TO CORONARY ATHEROSCLEROSIS, VASOSPASM, AND SYNDROME-X, The American journal of cardiology, 79(7), 1997, pp. 961
Citations number
6
Categorie Soggetti
Cardiac & Cardiovascular System
ISSN journal
00029149
Volume
79
Issue
7
Year of publication
1997
Database
ISI
SICI code
0002-9149(1997)79:7<961:IGIAAS>2.0.ZU;2-C
Abstract
It was recently reported that serum concentrations of insulin-like gro wth factor-I (serum total IGF-I) are reduced in patients with signific ant coronary atherosclerotic stenoses.' The rationale for the investig ation was the notion that when growth hormone (GH)-deficient subjects are abnormally prone to develop early coronary atherosclerotic disease (2) and GH-deficient patients have low serum IGF-I, then patients with coronary atherosclerosis may be GH-deficient and have low serum IGF-I . This may seem a somewhat unfounded syllogism, but patients with coro nary artery disease actually demonstrated reduced serum concentrations of IGF-I even though serum IGF-I did not correlate with the extent of coronary artery disease (coronary score). To confirm and enlarge this hypothesis, we measured a number of GH- and IGF-related substances in controls--not only in patients with classic coronary artery disease ( CAD), but also in patients with angina pectoris and normal coronary an giograms in the presence of a positive exercise test (''syndrome X'') and in patients with angina pectoris and demonstrable epicardial spasm in the absence of significant stenoses (''variant angina'').