Display Settings:

Format

Send to:

Choose Destination

    Endocr J. 2007 Dec;54(5):805-11. Epub 2007 Sep 25.

    Calcium channel blocker, azelnidipine, reduces lipid hydroperoxides in patients with type 2 diabetes independent of blood pressure.

    Ohmura C, Watada H, Shimizu T, Sakai K, Uchino H, Fujitani Y, Kanazawa A, Hirose T, Kawamori R.

    Department of Medicine, Metabolism and Endocrinology, Juntendo University School of Medicine, Tokyo, Japan.

    Anti-hypertensive agents with antioxidative effects are potentially useful for diabetic patients with hypertension to prevent the onset and progression of their complication. While dihydropyridine-type calcium antagonists are among the frequently used anti-hypertensive drugs, azelnidipine, a novel calcium antagonist, has been reported to have a unique anti-oxidative effect in vitro and in animals. In this study, we measured lipid hydroperoxides in human sample using diphenyl-1-pyrenylphosphine for the first time, and used the value of lipid hydroperoxides as an index of oxidative stress. Then, we compared the antioxidative properties of azelnidipine and amlodipine, a frequently used calcium antagonist in hypertensive diabetic patients. Administration of vitamin C and E for 8 weeks significantly reduced lipid hydroperoxides in erythrocyte membrane in normal subjects. In hypertensive diabetic patients, azelnidipine treatment for 12 weeks induced a more significant fall in erythrocyte lipid hydroperoxide level than amlodipine, though blood pressure during each treatment was comparable. Our data confirm the usefulness of lipid hydroperoxides in erythrocyte membrane as a marker of oxidative stress in vivo, and indicate that azelnidipine has a unique antioxidative property in human.

    PMID: 17895576 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

    Supplemental Content

    Click here to read Click here to read

    Patient drug information