In silico analysis of the anti-hypertensive drugs impact on myocardial oxygen balance.
Andrea GualaD LeoneA MilanL RidolfiPublished in: Biomechanics and modeling in mechanobiology (2017)
Hypertension is a very common pathology, and its clinical treatment largely relies on different drugs. Some of these drugs exhibit specific protective functions in addition to those resulting from blood pressure reduction. In this work, we study the impact of commonly used anti-hypertensive drugs (RAAS, [Formula: see text] and calcium channel blockers) on myocardial oxygen supply-consumption balance, which plays a crucial role in type 2 myocardial infarction. To this aim, 42 wash-out hypertensive patients were selected, a number of measured data were used to set a validated multi-scale cardiovascular model to subject-specific conditions, and the administration of different drugs was suitably simulated. Our results ascribe the well-known major cardioprotective efficiency of [Formula: see text] blockers compared to other drugs to a positive change of myocardial oxygen balance due to the concomitant: (1) reduction in aortic systolic, diastolic and pulse pressures, (2) decrease in left ventricular work, diastolic cavity pressure and oxygen consumption, (3) increase in coronary flow and (4) ejection efficiency improvement. RAAS blockers share several positive outcomes with [Formula: see text] blockers, although to a reduced extent. In contrast, calcium channel blockers seem to induce some potentially negative effects on the myocardial oxygen balance.
Keyphrases
- blood pressure
- left ventricular
- hypertensive patients
- hypertrophic cardiomyopathy
- angiotensin converting enzyme
- aortic stenosis
- heart rate
- heart failure
- acute myocardial infarction
- cardiac resynchronization therapy
- mitral valve
- left atrial
- magnetic resonance
- smoking cessation
- drug induced
- human milk
- angiotensin ii
- machine learning
- coronary artery disease
- magnetic resonance imaging
- type diabetes
- atrial fibrillation
- blood glucose
- molecular docking
- acute coronary syndrome
- preterm birth
- adipose tissue
- pulmonary hypertension
- deep learning
- skeletal muscle
- pulmonary artery