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Reducing Cardiac Injury during ST-Elevation Myocardial Infarction: A Reasoned Approach to a Multitarget Therapeutic Strategy

Alessandro Bellis, Giuseppe Di Gioia, Ciro Mauro, Costantino Mancusi, Emanuele Barbato, Raffaele Izzo, Bruno Trimarco, Carmine Morisco

2021Journal of Clinical Medicine27 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The significant reduction in 'ischemic time' through capillary diffusion of primary percutaneous intervention (pPCI) has rendered myocardial-ischemia reperfusion injury (MIRI) prevention a major issue in order to improve the prognosis of ST elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) patients. In fact, while the ischemic damage increases with the severity and the duration of blood flow reduction, reperfusion injury reaches its maximum with a moderate amount of ischemic injury. MIRI leads to the development of post-STEMI left ventricular remodeling (post-STEMI LVR), thereby increasing the risk of arrhythmias and heart failure. Single pharmacological and mechanical interventions have shown some benefits, but have not satisfactorily reduced mortality. Therefore, a multitarget therapeutic strategy is needed, but no univocal indications have come from the clinical trials performed so far. On the basis of the results of the consistent clinical studies analyzed in this review, we try to design a randomized clinical trial aimed at evaluating the effects of a reasoned multitarget therapeutic strategy on the prevention of post-STEMI LVR. In fact, we believe that the correct timing of pharmacological and mechanical intervention application, according to their specific ability to interfere with survival pathways, may significantly reduce the incidence of post-STEMI LVR and thus improve patient prognosis.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineMyocardial infarctionCardiologyInternal medicinePercutaneous coronary interventionClinical trialHeart failureVentricular remodelingTherapeutic effectTherapeutic approachReperfusion injuryST segmentIschemiaDiseaseCardiac Ischemia and ReperfusionCardiac Structural Anomalies and RepairAcute Myocardial Infarction Research
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