Showing posts sorted by date for query Losartan. Sort by relevance Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by date for query Losartan. Sort by relevance Show all posts

Tuesday, December 16, 2014

New treatment for marfan syndrome shows promise

Skeletal formula
In continuation of my update on Losartan

The results are being presented Nov. 18 at the American Heart Association's annual meeting in Chicago and will appear online the same day in The New England Journal of Medicine.
"For years, standard medical therapy for Marfan syndrome consisted of giving patients beta blockers, which lower heart rate and blood pressure, reducing stress on the wall of the aorta," said study co-author Alan C. Braverman, MD, a cardiologist at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis. "This new study suggests that we have a second option for patients that appears to be as effective as standard treatment."
The second option is Losartan (see above structure) , an angiotensin receptor blocker. Past research in mice and smaller clinical trials suggested that this class of drugs might actually be superior to beta blocker treatment for Marfan syndrome. Angiotensin receptor blockers commonly are prescribed to treat high blood pressure.
People with Marfan syndrome have weak connective tissues and tend to develop unusually long arms, legs and fingers. In addition to heart problems, patients often develop problems with the eyes, lungs, bones and joints. Patients with the condition are at high risk of sudden death from a tear in the aorta, also called an aortic dissection.
Though there is no cure for Marfan syndrome, treatment with beta blockers and preventive surgery to replace the section of the aorta adjacent to the heart has increased lifespan to near normal. But physicians have continued to look for more effective therapies, especially since some patients on beta blockers experience side effects such as tiredness and nausea.
So investigators in the Pediatric Heart Network of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), including Braverman and senior author Ronald V. Lacro, MD, a cardiologist at Harvard Medical School and Boston Children's Hospital, conducted a clinical trial comparing the beta blocker Atenolol with Losartan.
The study included 608 patients with Marfan syndrome at 21 medical centers nationwide. Patients were ages 6 months to 25 years and had enlarged aortas. Half of these participants were randomly given Losartan, the investigational treatment, and the other half received Atenolol, the standard therapy, but in higher doses than physicians typically prescribe to see if this would increase the beta blocker's effectiveness.
After following participants for three years, the investigators reported no differences between the two groups in the growth rate of the aorta. They further observed similar rates of tears in the aorta, similar numbers of surgeries required to repair these tears and no difference in the number of deaths between the two groups.

Monday, December 15, 2014

New treatment for marfan syndrome shows promise

The results are being presented Nov. 18 at the American Heart Association's annual meeting in Chicago and will appear online the same day in The New England Journal of Medicine.
"For years, standard medical therapy for Marfan syndrome consisted of giving patients beta blockers, which lower heart rate and blood pressure, reducing stress on the wall of the aorta," said study co-author Alan C. Braverman, MD, a cardiologist at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis. "This new study suggests that we have a second option for patients that appears to be as effective as standard treatment."
The second option is Losartan, an angiotensin receptor blocker. Past research in mice and smaller clinical trials suggested that this class of drugs might actually be superior to beta blocker treatment for Marfan syndrome. Angiotensin receptor blockers commonly are prescribed to treat high blood pressure.
People with Marfan syndrome have weak connective tissues and tend to develop unusually long arms, legs and fingers. In addition to heart problems, patients often develop problems with the eyes, lungs, bones and joints. Patients with the condition are at high risk of sudden death from a tear in the aorta, also called an aortic dissection.
Though there is no cure for Marfan syndrome, treatment with beta blockers and preventive surgery to replace the section of the aorta adjacent to the heart has increased lifespan to near normal. But physicians have continued to look for more effective therapies, especially since some patients on beta blockers experience side effects such as tiredness and nausea.
So investigators in the Pediatric Heart Network of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), including Braverman and senior author Ronald V. Lacro, MD, a cardiologist at Harvard Medical School and Boston Children's Hospital, conducted a clinical trial comparing the beta blocker Atenolol with Losartan.
The study included 608 patients with Marfan syndrome at 21 medical centers nationwide. Patients were ages 6 months to 25 years and had enlarged aortas. Half of these participants were randomly given Losartan, the investigational treatment, and the other half received Atenolol, the standard therapy, but in higher doses than physicians typically prescribe to see if this would increase the beta blocker's effectiveness.
After following participants for three years, the investigators reported no differences between the two groups in the growth rate of the aorta. They further observed similar rates of tears in the aorta, similar numbers of surgeries required to repair these tears and no difference in the number of deaths between the two groups.

Friday, December 30, 2011

Lostartan can reduce cigarette smoke-induced lung injury

Researchers from Johns Hopkins University, BaltimoreLostartan, lead by have found that, Dr.Enid R. Neptune Losartan a drug used widely in the clinic (e.g., to treat high blood pressure), reduced lung disease in mice caused by exposure to cigarette smoke. Losartan blocks the protein angiotensin receptor type 1, and its effects on cigarette smoke-induced lung injury were a result of the fact that blocking angiotensin receptor type 1 leads to a decrease in levels of the soluble molecule TGF-beta. The authors therefore suggest that other TGF-beta-targeted therapeutics might also be viable candidates for the treatment of  chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, COPD....

Ref : http://www.jci.org/articles/view/46215?search[article_text]=&search[authors_text]=Enid+Neptune