Hirulog-like peptide reduces balloon catheter injury induced neointima formation in rat carotid artery without increase in bleeding tendency

Journal of Vascular Research
Mengzhou XueG X Shen

Abstract

Vascular restenosis is one of the major concerns for the management of coronary artery disease using therapeutic vascular procedures. Treatments with thrombin-specific inhibitors, hirudin or hirulog-1, reduced ischemic events in coronary artery disease patients. Early started and prolonged infusions of these thrombin inhibitors partially prevented balloon catheter injury induced restenosis or neointima formation in experimental animal models, but increased the bleeding tendency. Hirulog-like peptide (HLP) was rationally designed to enhance the inhibition of the binding of thrombin to its receptor with less interruption of coagulation activity in comparison to hirulog-1. A single infusion of HLP for 4 h started 0.5 h before balloon catheter injury reduced neointima formation by 36% in rat carotid artery compared to vehicle controls. Tail bleeding time and activated partial thromboplastin time during HLP infusion were not significantly different from vehicle controls, but were significantly shorter than during heparin or hirulog-1 infusion. HLP treatment attenuated the expression of platelet-derived growth factor in the neointima of injured arteries. HLP also inhibited thrombin-induced thymidine incorporation in cultured baboon a...Continue Reading

Citations

Jul 15, 2005·Expert Opinion on Pharmacotherapy·Theodore E Warkentin, Andreas Koster
Dec 1, 2007·Journal of Cardiovascular Pharmacology·Xiao-Feng TangGarry X Shen

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