The antiatherogenic effects of amlodipine: promise of preclinical data.
1992
: Atherosclerosis is a complex and multifactorial disease, the endpoint of which is the formation of a calcified plaque. Intermediate events include intimal injury, smooth muscle cell proliferation and migration, macrophage infiltration, lipid accumulation and excess formation of ground substance. To determine whether the newly developed, long-acting calcium antagonist, amlodipine, slows the development of atherosclerotic lesions under experimental conditions, young New Zealand white rabbits were fed on a diet of 2% cholesterol plus 1% peanut oil for up to 12 weeks. Half the rabbits received 1 or 5 mg amlodipine/kg body weight/day. Amlodipine caused a significant and dose-dependent reduction in lesion formation in the thoracic aorta. At the same time thoracic aorta Ca2+ and cholesterol content were maintained at near normal levels, despite the raised plasma cholesterol levels. The protective effect of amlodipine persisted throughout a treatment period of 12 weeks, indicating the absence of tachyphylaxis.
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