5 results on '"Sitko GR"'
Search Results
2. Nonpeptide glycoprotein IIb/IIIa inhibitors: 14: oral antithrombotic efficacy of L-738,167 in a conscious canine model of coronary artery electrolytic injury.
- Author
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Cook JJ, Glass JD, Sitko GR, Holahan MA, Stupienski RF 3rd, Wallace AA, Stump GL, Hand EL, Askew BC, Hartman GD, Gould RJ, and Lynch JJ Jr
- Subjects
- Administration, Oral, Animals, Azepines administration & dosage, Bleeding Time, Blood Platelets drug effects, Coronary Thrombosis prevention & control, Dogs, Drug Administration Schedule, Female, Fibrinolytic Agents administration & dosage, Male, Platelet Function Tests, Sulfonamides administration & dosage, Azepines pharmacology, Coronary Disease blood, Fibrinolytic Agents pharmacology, Platelet Glycoprotein GPIIb-IIIa Complex antagonists & inhibitors, Sulfonamides pharmacology
- Abstract
Background: A conscious dog model of left circumflex coronary artery electrolytic injury was used to assess the oral antithrombotic efficacy of L-738,167, a potent nonpeptide antagonist of platelet GP IIb/IIIa. L-738,167 was administered either as a single oral pretreatment dose 2 hours before initiation of vessel injury or as two oral doses administered 24 hours apart, 12 hours before and after initiation of vessel injury., Methods and Results: In untreated controls, electrolytic coronary injury (50 microA, 3 hours) resulted in thrombotic occlusion and myocardial ischemia in 15 of 16 dogs, with 4 developing lethal arrhythmias. Significant reductions in thrombus mass and complete prevention of myocardial ischemia and infarction were achieved with a single 100- to 300-microg/kg dose of L-738,167 pretreatment and with two 100-microg/kg doses administered 12 hours before and after initiation of vessel injury. Delays and/or reductions in incidence of ischemia, thrombus mass, and infarct sizes also were achieved with 10- to 30-microg/kg pretreatment and with two 30-microg/kg doses administered 12 hours before and after initiation of vessel injury. None of the L-738,167-treated animals developed lethal arrhythmias. A single oral 100-microg/kg dose of L-738,167 achieved >90% inhibitions of ADP (extent)- and collagen (rate)-induced ex vivo platelet aggregation and fivefold to sixfold or greater elevations in bleeding time; a single oral 30-microg/kg dose of L-738,167 achieved sustained 40% to 70% inhibitions of ADP- and collagen-induced ex vivo platelet aggregation and modest twofold to threefold elevations in bleeding time. At 12 to 24 hours after single oral 30- and 100-microg/kg doses of L-738,167, a substantially greater L-738,167 concentration was associated with platelets than free in plasma., Conclusions: These findings are indicative of potent and sustained oral antithrombotic efficacy and suggest that L-738,167 possesses potential for the oral management of chronic thrombotic occlusive disorders.
- Published
- 1997
3. An antibody against the exosite of the cloned thrombin receptor inhibits experimental arterial thrombosis in the African green monkey.
- Author
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Cook JJ, Sitko GR, Bednar B, Condra C, Mellott MJ, Feng DM, Nutt RF, Shafer JA, Gould RJ, and Connolly TM
- Subjects
- Animals, Antibody Formation, Chlorocebus aethiops, Platelet Aggregation drug effects, Receptors, Thrombin chemistry, Receptors, Thrombin genetics, Recombinant Proteins chemistry, Recombinant Proteins genetics, Recombinant Proteins immunology, Antibodies therapeutic use, Receptors, Thrombin immunology, Thrombosis drug therapy
- Abstract
Background: Thrombin inhibitors have been shown to be efficacious in animal models of thrombosis and in initial human clinical trials. It is unknown if their efficacy is due to their prevention of thrombin-mediated fibrin formation or to an inhibitory effect on thrombin-stimulated platelet activation. Appropriate tools to address this question have not been available. Therefore, to evaluate the role of the platelet thrombin receptor in intravascular thrombus formation, a polyclonal antibody was raised against a peptide derived from the thrombin-binding exosite region of the cloned human thrombin receptor. This antibody serves as a selective inhibitor of the thrombin receptor for in vivo evaluation., Methods and Results: The immune IgG (IgG 9600) inhibited thrombin-stimulated aggregation and secretion of human platelets. In contrast, it had no effect on platelet activation induced by other agonists including ADP, collagen, or the thrombin receptor-derived peptide SFLLR-NH2. IgG 9600 also inhibited thrombin-induced aggregation of African Green monkey (AGM) platelets. By Western blot analysis, the IgG identified a protein of approximately 64 kD in homogenates of both human and AGM platelets. The effect of thrombin receptor blockade by this antibody on arterial thrombosis was evaluated in an in vivo model of platelet-dependent cyclic flow reductions (CFRs) in the carotid artery of the AGM. The intravenous administration of IgG 9600 (10 mg/kg) abolished CFRs in three monkeys and reduced CFR frequency by 50% in a fourth monkey. Ex vivo platelet aggregation in response to up to 100 nmol/L thrombin was completely inhibited during the 120-minute postbolus observation period in all four animals. There was a twofold increase in bleeding time, which was not statistically different from baseline, and ex vivo clotting time (APTT) was not changed. The glycoprotein IIb/IIIa receptor antagonist MK-0852 and the thrombin inhibitor recombinant hirudin also demonstrated inhibitory effects on CFRs at doses that did not significantly prolong template bleeding time. Control IgG had no effect on CFRs, ex vivo platelet aggregation, bleeding time, or APTT., Conclusions: These results demonstrate that blockade of the platelet thrombin receptor can prevent arterial thrombosis in this animal model without significantly altering hemostatic parameters and suggest that the thrombin receptor is an attractive antithrombotic target.
- Published
- 1995
- Full Text
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4. Conjunctive enhancement of enzymatic thrombolysis and prevention of thrombotic reocclusion with the selective factor Xa inhibitor, tick anticoagulant peptide. Comparison to hirudin and heparin in a canine model of acute coronary artery thrombosis.
- Author
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Sitko GR, Ramjit DR, Stabilito II, Lehman D, Lynch JJ, and Vlasuk GP
- Subjects
- Animals, Arthropod Proteins, Coronary Circulation, Coronary Disease prevention & control, Dogs, Drug Synergism, Female, Hemodynamics, Hemostasis, Heparin pharmacology, Hirudins blood, Hirudins pharmacology, Intercellular Signaling Peptides and Proteins, Male, Myocardial Reperfusion methods, Peptides blood, Recombinant Proteins, Recurrence, Coronary Disease therapy, Factor Xa Inhibitors, Peptides pharmacology, Tissue Plasminogen Activator therapeutic use
- Abstract
Background: Effective thrombolytic recanalization of an occluded coronary vessel is often limited by acute thrombotic reocclusion, which has galvanized the search for effective adjunctive or conjunctive antithrombotic agents., Methods and Results: Recombinant versions of tick anticoagulant peptide (rTAP) and hirudin (rHIR) are highly selective and potent polypeptide inhibitors of factor Xa and thrombin, respectively. The comparative antithrombotic efficacies of rTAP, rHIR, and heparin, administered conjunctively with recombinant tissue-type plasminogen activator (rt-PA), on thrombolytic reperfusion and reocclusion, were determined in a canine model of occlusive coronary artery thrombosis with a superimposed critical stenosis. In this model, a platelet-rich occlusive thrombus was formed after damage to the intimal surface of the left circumflex coronary artery induced by electrolytic injury. Fifteen minutes after occlusion, the dogs received a systemic intravenous administration of either saline (control), heparin (200 units/kg bolus + 2 units/kg/min, heparin (HEP) 200 or 100 units/kg bolus + 1 unit/kg/min, HEP 100), rHIR (50 or 100 micrograms/kg/min, rHIR 50 or 100, respectively), or rTAP (100 micrograms/kg/min, rTAP 100) followed 15 minutes later by rt-PA (100 micrograms/kg bolus + 10 micrograms/kg/min over 90 minutes). Infusions of the conjunctive agents were discontinued 60 minutes after termination of rt-PA. The incidence and time (mean +/- SEM) to thrombolytic reperfusion were determined for control (five of 12; 68.0 +/- 7.8 minutes), HEP 100 (six of eight; 40.1 +/- 8.3 minutes), HEP 200 (six of eight; 39.8 +/- 9.5 minutes), rHIR 50 (six of eight; 51.7 +/- 14.6 minutes), rHIR 100 (eight of eight; 19.5 +/- 4.2 minutes), and rTAP 100 (eight of eight; 22.8 +/- 10.0 minutes). The incidence and time to reocclusion after rt-PA were determined for control (four of five; 45.7 +/- 12.5 minutes), HEP 100 (four of six; 18.2 +/- 10.7 minutes), HEP 200 (five of six; 26.2 +/- 20.7 minutes), rHIR 50 (four of six; 47.3 +/- 21.6 minutes), rHIR 100 (six of eight; 89.8 +/- 5.9 minutes), and rTAP 100 (three of eight; 54.0 +/- 16.3 minutes). All of the dogs that reoccluded in the rHIR 100 group did so after termination of the inhibitor infusion, whereas two of the three dogs in the rTAP 100 group that reoccluded did so during the inhibitor infusion. Coronary artery blood flow was characterized by intermittent periods of reocclusion and recanalization in all groups except rTAP 100., Conclusions: The potent antithrombotic effects of rTAP in this model directly implicate de novo thrombin formation as a major source of thrombin activity within the highly thrombogenic residual thrombus. These findings suggest that direct inhibition of prothrombinase activity may be an effective strategy in the development of a new class of conjunctive agents.
- Published
- 1992
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5. Acceleration of recombinant tissue-type plasminogen activator-induced thrombolysis and prevention of reocclusion by the combination of heparin and the Arg-Gly-Asp-containing peptide bitistatin in a canine model of coronary thrombosis.
- Author
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Shebuski RJ, Stabilito IJ, Sitko GR, and Polokoff MH
- Subjects
- Animals, Coronary Circulation, Coronary Thrombosis prevention & control, Dogs, Drug Combinations, Electric Stimulation, Female, Hemodynamics, Male, Myocardial Reperfusion methods, Partial Thromboplastin Time, Platelet Aggregation, Recombinant Proteins, Recurrence, Snake Venoms, Coronary Disease physiopathology, Coronary Thrombosis physiopathology, Fibrinolytic Agents pharmacology, Heparin pharmacology, Peptides pharmacology, Tissue Plasminogen Activator pharmacology
- Abstract
The effect of tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA) alone or in combination with heparin, the Arg-Gly-Asp-containing peptide bitistatin, or both heparin and bitistatin was evaluated on thrombolysis time and acute reocclusion in a canine model of coronary thrombosis. Thrombus formation was elicited by electrolytic injury with a needle electrode to the endothelial surface of the circumflex coronary artery in the open-chest, anesthetized dog in the presence of a flow-limiting critical stenosis. Thirty minutes after spontaneous coronary artery occlusion, t-PA (1 mg/kg i.v. over 90 minutes) was administered. Group 1 was given t-PA alone; reperfusion occurred at 78.2 +/- 5.6 minutes with a reperfusion incidence of 60% (6/10). Group 2 received t-PA plus heparin (100 units/kg plus 50 units/kg/hr); reperfusion occurred at 61.9 +/- 9.1 minutes with a reperfusion incidence of 90% (9/10). Group 3 received t-PA plus heparin plus bitistatin (30 micrograms/kg plus 3 micrograms/kg/min); reperfusion occurred at 47.3 +/- 7.6 minutes (p less than 0.05 versus group 1) with a reperfusion incidence of 90% (9/10). Group 4 received t-PA plus bitistatin, and reperfusion occurred at 51.8 +/- 8.5 minutes; however, the reperfusion incidence was only 60% (6/10). In groups 1, 2, and 4, acute reocclusion occurred in more than 80% of the reperfused dogs, whereas in group 3 reocclusion occurred in 22% (2/9) of the reperfused dogs (p less than 0.05 versus group 1). The dose of heparin used in this study increased activated partial thromboplastin times 1.5-2.0-fold over control.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
- Published
- 1990
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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