Interaction of Risk Factors, Comorbidities, and Comedications with Ischemia/Reperfusion
Injury and Cardioprotection by Preconditioning, Postconditioning, and Remote Conditioning
Pre-, post-, and remote conditioning of the myocardium are well described adaptive
responses that markedly enhance the ability of the heart to withstand a prolonged
ischemia/reperfusion insult and provide therapeutic paradigms for cardioprotection.
Nevertheless, more than 25 years after the discovery of ischemic preconditioning,
we still do not have established cardioprotective drugs on the market. Most experimental
studies on cardioprotection are still undertaken in animal models, in which ischemia/reperfusion
is imposed in the absence of cardiovascular risk factors. However, ischemic heart
disease in humans is a complex disorder caused by, or associated with, cardiovascular
risk factors and comorbidities, including hypertension, hyperlipidemia, diabetes,
insulin resistance, heart failure, altered coronary circulation, and aging. These
risk factors induce fundamental alterations in cellular signaling cascades that affect
the development of ischemia/reperfusion injury per se and responses to cardioprotective
interventions. Moreover, some of the medications used to treat these risk factors,
including statins, nitrates, and antidiabetic drugs, may impact cardioprotection by
modifying cellular signaling. The aim of this article is to review the recent evidence
that cardiovascular risk factors and their medication may modify the response to cardioprotective
interventions. We emphasize the critical need to take into account the presence of
cardiovascular risk factors and concomitant medications when designing preclinical
studies for the identification and validation of cardioprotective drug targets and
clinical studies. This will hopefully maximize the success rate of developing rational
approaches to effective cardioprotective therapies for the majority of patients with
multiple risk factors.