open access

Vol 1, No 1 (2016)
Original article
Published online: 2016-08-11
Get Citation

Impact of prior statin therapy on evaluation of the inflammatory process and cortisol concentration in patients with the first ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction undergoing coronary angioplasty with bare metal stent implantation

Przemysław Magielski, Anna Szcześniak, Karolina Obońska, Wioleta Stolarek, Iwona Świątkiewicz, Adam Sukiennik, Zofia Grąbczewska, Grzegorz Grześk, Marek Koziński, Jacek Kubica
·
Medical Research Journal 2016;1(1):28-36.

open access

Vol 1, No 1 (2016)
ORIGINAL ARTICLES
Published online: 2016-08-11

Abstract

Introduction. The aim of the current study was to verify the impact of statin therapy on evaluation of the inflammatory process and cortisol concentration in patients with the first episode of ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction undergoing coronary angioplasty with bare metal stent implantation.

Material and methods. The study was designed as a prospective, single-center cohort study, with a total number of 200 patients enrolled between 2005 and 2008.

Results. Seventeen patients with ongoing statin therapy and 167 patients without those agents underwent pPCI with BMS implantation. The cortisol concentration on admission was significantly lower in statin therapy subgroup — median 14.9 μg/dL (9.5–23.3 IQR) vs. 28,1 μg/dL (17.2–39.9 IQR) for patients without lipid lowering drug, p = 0.01. The level of cortisol after 23h was also significantly lower in statin receiving subgroup: 10.4 μg/dL (8.3–19 IQR) vs. 17.3 μg/dL (10.1–25.9 IQR) adequately, p = 0.021. Those two groups did not differ significantly in relation to CRP, IL-6, IL-10 concentrations and to anti-inflammatory cytokine ratio [IL-6/IL-10] on admission, after 24h and at discharge. Significant differences were observed in the concentrations of cTnI and activities of CK and CK-MB.

Conclusions. Ongoing statin therapy before an episode of myocardial infarction has an influence on cortisol concentration and cardiac markers. No significant effect on serum levels of cytokines has been observed.  

Abstract

Introduction. The aim of the current study was to verify the impact of statin therapy on evaluation of the inflammatory process and cortisol concentration in patients with the first episode of ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction undergoing coronary angioplasty with bare metal stent implantation.

Material and methods. The study was designed as a prospective, single-center cohort study, with a total number of 200 patients enrolled between 2005 and 2008.

Results. Seventeen patients with ongoing statin therapy and 167 patients without those agents underwent pPCI with BMS implantation. The cortisol concentration on admission was significantly lower in statin therapy subgroup — median 14.9 μg/dL (9.5–23.3 IQR) vs. 28,1 μg/dL (17.2–39.9 IQR) for patients without lipid lowering drug, p = 0.01. The level of cortisol after 23h was also significantly lower in statin receiving subgroup: 10.4 μg/dL (8.3–19 IQR) vs. 17.3 μg/dL (10.1–25.9 IQR) adequately, p = 0.021. Those two groups did not differ significantly in relation to CRP, IL-6, IL-10 concentrations and to anti-inflammatory cytokine ratio [IL-6/IL-10] on admission, after 24h and at discharge. Significant differences were observed in the concentrations of cTnI and activities of CK and CK-MB.

Conclusions. Ongoing statin therapy before an episode of myocardial infarction has an influence on cortisol concentration and cardiac markers. No significant effect on serum levels of cytokines has been observed.  

Get Citation

Keywords

inflammation, CRP, IL-6, IL-10, cortisol, cTnI, CK-MB, myocardial infarction, bare metal stent, statins, STEMI, primary PCI, coronary angioplasty

About this article
Title

Impact of prior statin therapy on evaluation of the inflammatory process and cortisol concentration in patients with the first ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction undergoing coronary angioplasty with bare metal stent implantation

Journal

Medical Research Journal

Issue

Vol 1, No 1 (2016)

Article type

Original article

Pages

28-36

Published online

2016-08-11

Page views

648

Article views/downloads

888

DOI

10.5603/MRJ.2016.0005

Bibliographic record

Medical Research Journal 2016;1(1):28-36.

Keywords

inflammation
CRP
IL-6
IL-10
cortisol
cTnI
CK-MB
myocardial infarction
bare metal stent
statins
STEMI
primary PCI
coronary angioplasty

Authors

Przemysław Magielski
Anna Szcześniak
Karolina Obońska
Wioleta Stolarek
Iwona Świątkiewicz
Adam Sukiennik
Zofia Grąbczewska
Grzegorz Grześk
Marek Koziński
Jacek Kubica

Regulations

Important: This website uses cookies. More >>

The cookies allow us to identify your computer and find out details about your last visit. They remembering whether you've visited the site before, so that you remain logged in - or to help us work out how many new website visitors we get each month. Most internet browsers accept cookies automatically, but you can change the settings of your browser to erase cookies or prevent automatic acceptance if you prefer.

By VM Media Group sp. z o.o., ul. Świętokrzyska 73, 80–180 Gdańsk, Poland
tel.:+48 58 320 94 94, fax:+48 58 320 94 60, e-mail: viamedica@viamedica.pl