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One dose of EPO can limit amount of damage to the heart following attack

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One dose of EPO can limit amount of damage to the heart following attack

After a heart attack, two things happen - necrosis (normal cell death) and apoptosis (programmed cell death) - and both are bad. Now, a group of scientists has found that a single intravenous dose of the hormone erythropoietin (EPO) immediately after the incident can limit the amount of damage to the heart.

Washington, Oct 9 : After a heart attack, two things happen - necrosis (normal cell death) and apoptosis (programmed cell death) - and both are bad. Now, a group of scientists has found that a single intravenous dose of the hormone erythropoietin (EPO) immediately after the incident can limit the amount of damage to the heart.

The study has been published in the October issue of The Journal of Nuclear Medicine.

One dose of EPO eliminate apoptosis after myocardial infarction (heart attack), the study says.

"The study's concept is very novel. We wanted to see if the area of cell death following acute coronary occlusion could be reduced by a single dose of EPO," said H William. Strauss, M.D., attending physician in the Nuclear Medicine Service at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, professor of radiology at Weill Cornell School of Medicine and a co-author of the manuscript.

"Cells deprived of blood quickly begin to die. By administering 99mTc-annexin V, a radiotracer with a high affinity for apoptotic cells, we were able to view the effects of EPO on heart cells immediately following the restriction of blood flow that occurs during MI," the expert said.

In the study, 18 Wistar rats were randomized into two groups. In both groups, arteries were blocked to induce a heart attack; 20 minutes later, they were unblocked.

Immediately afterward, one group (treatment) received an injection of EPO and the other group of saline (non-treatment). Both groups were then injected with 99mTc-annexin V, and their hearts were examined using autoradiography to evaluate the distribution of the radiotracer.

In the treatment group, EPO therapy caused a 2.7-fold reduction of tracer accumulation, indicating a reduction in apoptosis and, therefore, less damage to heart tissue.

The reduction in damage to the heart was also demonstrated by measurement of regional cardiac function, which was significantly better in the EPO-treated group. These findings suggest that EPO may be useful to prevent long-term heart damage and dysfunction after a heart attack.

"Although other drugs to inhibit apoptosis have been studied, none appears nearly as effective as a single dose of EPO," Strauss said.

EPO is a naturally occurring hormone that promotes the formation of red blood cells in the bone marrow. It was first produced artificially to aid in the treatment of anemia.

Apoptosis is sometimes referred to as "cell suicide," because the biochemically programmed mechanism triggers damaged cells to self-destruct, albeit in an orderly way.

Researchers have found that cells can die by several pathways, only one of which is apoptosis. Because cell death is central to normal physiology and numerous disease states, research into apoptosis is ongoing in a variety of medical areas, including oncology and cardiology.

ANI

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