Initial Despair and Current Hope of Identifying a Clinically Useful Treatment of Myocardial Reperfusion Injury: Insights Derived from Studies of Platelet P2Y12 Antagonists and Interference with Inflammation and NLRP3 Assembly
Michael V. Cohen, James M. Downey

TL;DR
This paper discusses the challenges and potential solutions for reducing heart damage caused by restoring blood flow after a heart attack.
Contribution
The paper highlights the potential of combining P2Y12 antagonists with anti-inflammatory strategies to reduce reperfusion injury.
Findings
P2Y12 antagonists reduce reperfusion injury in animals and may do so in humans.
Blocking caspase-1 provides additional protection when combined with P2Y12 antagonists.
Timely application of protective interventions is crucial for effectiveness.
Abstract
Myocardial necrosis following the successful reperfusion of a coronary artery occluded by thrombus in a patient presenting with ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) continues to be a serious problem, despite the multiple attempts to attenuate the necrosis with agents that have shown promise in pre-clinical investigations. Possible reasons include confounding clinical risk factors, the delayed application of protective agents, poorly designed pre-clinical investigations, the possible effects of routinely administered agents that might unknowingly already have protected the myocardium or that might have blocked protection, and the biological differences of the myocardium in humans and experimental animals. A better understanding of the pathobiology of myocardial infarction is needed to stem this reperfusion injury. P2Y12 receptor antagonists minimize platelet aggregation and are…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCardiac Ischemia and Reperfusion · Acute Myocardial Infarction Research · Coronary Interventions and Diagnostics
