Long-term treatment with low-dose metoprolol CR/XL is associated with increased plaque echogenicity: the Beta-blocker Cholesterol-lowering Asymptomatic Plaque Study (BCAPS).

Atherosclerosis(2011)

引用 23|浏览8
暂无评分
摘要
To examine whether the decrease in IMT progression rate in the carotid bulb induced by metoprolol CR/XL treatment (25mg once daily) observed in the β-blocker Cholesterol-lowering Asymptomatic Plaque Study (BCAPS) was accompanied by an effect on carotid plaque echogenicity.Gray scale median (GSM) in carotid plaques, used as a score of echogenicity, was measured at baseline and after 36 months in those 341 subjects (aged 49-69 years) with an asymptomatic moderate- to large-sized carotid plaque present at baseline and at follow-up. Participants were in a factorial design assigned to treatment with metoprolol CR/XL (25mg once daily), fluvastatin (40 mg once daily) or corresponding placebo.After 36 months plaques were more echogenic in participants treated compared to those not treated with metoprolol CR/XL (57.3 ± 16.8 versus 51.8 ± 20.0, p=0.006). GSM had increased more from baseline in the metoprolol CR/XL treated subjects (25 ± 15 versus 18 ± 20, p<0.001), and plaques that had become more echolucent were less frequent in the metoprolol CR/XL treated subjects (3.6% versus 17.0%, p<0.001).Long-term treatment with low dose metoprolol CR/XL in clinically healthy subjects with moderate-sized carotid plaques was associated with increase in plaque echogenicity, suggesting a potential beneficial effect of the β-blocker treatment on plaque stability.
更多
查看译文
关键词
Plaque,Echogenicity,β-Blocker,Ultrasound
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要