Introduction: Growing evidence points to sympathetic hyperactivity as one critical trigger for life-threatening arrhythmias among postmyocardial infarction patients.Methods and Results: We have evaluated, in a placebo-controlled multicenter study, the efficacy of a /3-adrenergic blocking agent (oxprenolol 160 mg) and of a selective left cardiac sympathetic denervation in preventing sudden death in patients with a first and anterior myocardial infarction. Two patient groups were studied. The high-risk group included 144 patients who survived a myocardial infarction complicated by either ventricular tachycardia or fibrillation. The relatively low-risk group included 869 patients whose myocardial infarction did not have these complications; they were allocated only to placebo or oxprenolol. Randomization took place 30 days postmyocardial infarction; mean follow-up was 22 months. In the high-risk group the sudden cardiac death (crude rate) in the placebo subgroup was indeed high (21.3%), and was strikingly reduced to 2.7% and to 3.6% by oxprenolol and by left cardiac sympathetic denervation, respectively (P < 0.05). In the low-risk group the sudden cardiac death (crude rate) in the placebo subgroup was 5.2% and was still reduced by oxprenolol to 1.6% (P < 0.05). The results for total mortality were quite similar to those for sudden death iu both groups.Conclusion: This study, unique for the populations studied and for one of the treatments used, demonstrates that pharmacologic and surgical antiadrenergic interventions significantly reduce sudden cardiac death in postmyocardial infarction patients at high and at low risk. With due consideration to the relatively small size of the high-risk group, it seems reasonable to suggest that left cardiac sympathetic denervatiou may be considered as a possible alternative for high-risk patients with contraindications to beta hlockers. (
The effect of nicotine absorbed transdermally from a patch (TNS) and from cigarette smoking on insulin secretion and action in Type 2 diabetes has been compared. Twelve Type 2 diabetic smoking patients, aged 51 y, with diabetes for 9 y, treated either with diet and/or oral hypoglycaemic agents, were studied on three occasions, according to a double-blind, placebo-controlled, cross-over design. The subjects were investigated 12 h after their last cigarette or application of one patch of TNS 30 cm2 or TNS placebo, or whilst smoking their usual cigarette. Insulin secretion was assessed by a glucagon (1 mg IV) stimulation test. On a second occasion, insulin action was assessed by a hyperglycaemic-hyperinsulinaemic clamp, the spontaneous hyperglycaemia of the fasting state (8.61 mmol.l-1) being maintained during a 4 h insulin infusion (at 0.1 mU.kg-1.min-1 for the initial 2 h, and 1 mU.kg-1.min-1 during the last 2 h). TNS and the cigarette did not affect endogenous insulin secretion as compared to placebo. During the initial 2 h of the clamp study, plasma insulin increased from 88 to 155 pmol.l-1, hepatic glucose production (3-3H-glucose) was less suppressed after TNS (4.31 mumol.kg-1.min-1) than after placebo (2.5 mumol.kg-1.min-1), but was more suppressed than after cigarette smoking (5.61 mumol.kg-1.min-1). In the last 2 h of the clamp (plasma insulin 646 pmol.l-1), glucose utilization was less stimulated after TNS (36.1 mumol.kg-1.min-1) vs placebo (39.8 mumol.kg-1.min-1), but more than after cigarette smoking (33.6 mumol.kg-1.min-1), primarily because of a decrease in glucose storage.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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