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Preventive effects of exenatide on endothelial dysfunction induced by ischemia-reperfusion injury via KATP channels.

Arterioscler Thromb Vasc Biol · 2012

Last updated 2026-05-28

In a study of 20 volunteers, a single dose of exenatide (10 micrograms) given under the skin prevented damage to blood vessel function caused by a 15-minute blockage followed by 15 minutes of blood flow restoration. Without exenatide, blood vessel function dropped from 12.0% to 4.6%, but with exenatide, it remained stable at 15.0%. This protective effect was blocked when participants also took glibenclamide (5 milligrams), a drug that closes certain channels in blood vessels.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalArterioscler Thromb Vasc Biol, 2012
Citations51
Relative citation ratio1.49
NIH percentile64
Molecules exenatide
Conditions studied Cardiovascular Risk Reduction

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this study was to evaluate whether exenatide administration can prevent impairment in endothelium-dependent vasodilatation induced by ischemia-reperfusion (IR) injury and whether this effect is mediated by K(ATP) channel opening. METHODS AND RESULTS: In a double-blind, placebo-controlled, crossover design, 20 volunteers were randomly assigned to 2 groups: subcutaneous exenatide (10 μg) or placebo administration. At 30 minutes after the study drug administration, endothelium-dependent flow-mediated dilatation (FMD) of the radial artery was measured before and after IR (15 minutes of ischemia at the level of the brachial artery followed by 15 minutes of reperfusion) injury. Seven days later, both groups were crossed over and received the other treatment (ie, placebo or exenatide) and underwent the same protocol. Pre-IR radial artery diameter, FMD, and baseline radial artery diameter after IR injury were similar between 2 groups (P=no significant difference). After placebo administration, IR significantly blunted FMD (before IR: 12.0±6.23%; after IR: 4.6±3.57%, P=0.02). Exenatide prevented this impairment (FMD before IR: 15.0±7.14%; FMD after IR: 15.0±5.96%, P=no significant difference; P<0.001 compared with placebo). In a separate protocol, this protective effect was completely abolished by pretreatment with glibenclamide (glyburide, 5 mg), a blocker of K(ATP) channels (n=7; FMD before IR: 12.0±2.2%; after IR: 3.2±2.1%, P<0.001). CONCLUSIONS: The present study demonstrates that subcutaneous exenatide protects IR-induced endothelial dysfunction through opening of K(ATP) channels in human IR injury model.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 22155457 ↗

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