Introduction and objectives: In patients with ST-elevation acute myocardial infarction treated by thrombolysis, both early endothelial dysfunction and long-term improvement in the infarct-related artery have been reported. Our aims were to assess the degree of endothelial dysfunction present after primary angioplasty and to compare it with that after thrombolysis.
Methods: Endothelial function was assessed 9 days after infarction by infusing acetylcholine, at an increasing concentration, and subsequently nitroglycerine into the infarct-related artery in 16 patients who had undergone primary angioplasty and bare-metal stent implantation. In addition, endothelial function was compared with that in a group of 16 patients treated by thrombolysis in a different time period. The mean change in the diameters of segments distal to the culprit lesion or the treated lesion were evaluated by quantitative coronary angiography.
Results: Baseline characteristics were similar in the two groups, except that patients in the primary angioplasty group were treated with clopidogrel and there were differences in residual stenosis in the infarct-related artery (3% in the primary angioplasty group compared with 62% in the thrombolysis group). At the maximum acetylcholine concentration, the degree of vasoconstriction was less in the primary angioplasty group than in the thrombolysis group (-4+/-5% vs. -20+/-21%; P=.018).
Conclusions: Early endothelium-dependent vasoconstriction in the infarct-related artery was lower in acute myocardial infarction patients treated by primary angioplasty and bare-metal stent implantation than in those treated by thrombolysis.