心脏病患者的非胰岛素降糖治疗:目前的问题和未来展望。

Enrique Z Fisman, Michael Motro, Alexander Tenenbaum
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引用次数: 41

摘要

目前有五种口服降糖药物被批准用于治疗糖尿病:双胍类药物、磺脲类药物、美格列酮类药物、格列酮类药物和α -葡萄糖苷酶抑制剂。我们简要回顾了这些人群中最常用的降糖药物的心血管作用,试图提高对其在治疗冠状动脉疾病(CAD)时的影响和潜在风险的认识和认识。对于双胍类药物,腹泻等胃肠道紊乱是常见的,并且在慢性治疗期间,肠道对B族维生素和叶酸的吸收受到损害。这种缺乏可能导致血浆同型半胱氨酸水平升高,进而由于对血小板、凝血因子和内皮的不利影响而加速血管疾病的进展。同型半胱氨酸水平与冠心病患者总死亡率之间存在分级相关性已得到充分证实。此外,二甲双胍可能导致致死性乳酸酸中毒,特别是在有心衰或新近心肌梗死等临床条件易患这种并发症的患者中。磺脲类药物可避免缺血预处理。在心肌缺血期间,它们可能阻止atp依赖性钾通道的打开,阻碍通过阻断钙流入来保护细胞的必要的超极化。美格列汀类药物的作用机制相似,可能具有相似的效果。在使用格列酮治疗期间,有5%的患者出现水肿,这些药物是NYHA III类或IV类心脏状态的糖尿病患者的禁忌症。α -葡萄糖苷酶抑制剂对发病率和死亡率以及糖尿病微血管和大血管并发症的长期影响尚不清楚。磺脲/二甲双胍联合治疗显示对死亡率的累加效应。应注意四点:(1)5种口服降糖药组存在已证实的或潜在的心脏危害;(2)这些危害不仅仅是“副作用”,而是深深植根于药物的作用机制中;(3)目前的数据表明,格列本脲/二甲双胍联合治疗似乎存在特殊的风险,应避免在确诊为冠心病的2型糖尿病患者的长期管理中使用;(4)糖尿病心脏病患者的非胰岛素降糖治疗155 .应研究定制的降糖药物方法,以最佳治疗糖尿病心脏病患者。新的可能性是肠促胰岛素模拟化合物,二肽基肽酶(DPP)-4抑制剂,吸入胰岛素和最终口服胰岛素。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Non-insulin antidiabetic therapy in cardiac patients: current problems and future prospects.

Five types of oral antihyperglycemic drugs are currently approved for the treatment of diabetes: biguanides, sulfonylureas, meglitinides, glitazones and alpha-glucosidase inhibitors. We briefly review the cardiovascular effects of the most commonly used antidiabetic drugs in these groups in an attempt to improve knowledge and awareness regarding their influences and potential risks when treating patients with coronary artery disease (CAD). Regarding biguanides, gastrointestinal disturbances such as diarrhea are frequent, and the intestinal absorption of group B vitamins and folate is impaired during chronic therapy. This deficiency may lead to increased plasma homocysteine levels which, in turn, accelerate the progression of vascular disease due to adverse effects on platelets, clotting factors, and endothelium. The existence of a graded association between homocysteine levels and overall mortality in patients with CAD is well established. In addition, metformin may lead to lethal lactic acidosis, especially in patients with clinical conditions that predispose to this complication, such as heart failure or recent myocardial infarction. Sulfonylureas avoid ischemic preconditioning. During myocardial ischemia, they may prevent opening of the ATP-dependent potassium channels, impeding the necessary hyperpolarization that protects the cell by blocking calcium influx. Meglitinides may exert similar effects due to their analogous mechanism of action. During treatment with glitazones, edema has been reported in 5% of patients, and these drugs are contraindicated in diabetics with NYHA class III or IV cardiac status. The long-term effects of alpha-glucosidase inhibitors on morbidity and mortality rates and on diabetic micro- and macrovascular complications is still unknown. Combined sulfonylurea/metformin therapy reveals additive effects on mortality. Four points should be mentioned: (1) the five oral antidiabetic drug groups present proven or potential cardiac hazards; (2) these hazards are not mere 'side effects' but are deeply rooted in the drugs' mechanisms of action; (3) current data indicate that combined glibenclamide/metformin therapy seems to present a special risk and should be avoided in the long-term management of type 2 diabetics with proven CAD, and (4) Non-Insulin Antidiabetic Therapy in Diabetic Cardiac Patients 155 customized antihyperglycemic pharmacological approaches should be investigated for the optimal treatment of diabetic patients with heart disease. New possibilities are represented by incretin mimetic compounds, dipeptidyl peptidase (DPP)-4 inhibitors, inhaled insulin and eventually oral insulin.

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