Isoprostanes: Potential markers of oxidant stress in atherothrombotic disease

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Abstract

Isoprostanes are emerging as a new class of biologically active products of arachidonic acid metabolism of potential relevance to human vascular disease. Their formation in vivo seems to reflect primarily, if not exclusively, a nonenzymatic process of lipid peroxidation. Enhanced urinary excretion of 8-iso-PGF(2α) has been described in association with cardiac reperfusion injury and with cardiovascular risk factors, including cigarette smoking, diabetes mellitus, and hypercholesterolemia. Besides providing a likely noninvasive index of lipid peroxidation in these settings, measurements of specific F2 isoprostanes in urine may provide a sensitive biochemical end point for dose-finding studies of natural and synthetic inhibitors of lipid peroxidation. Although the biological effects of 8-iso- PGF(2α) in vitro suggest that it and other isoeicosanoids may modulate the functional consequences of lipid peroxidation, evidence that this is likely in vivo remains inadequate at this time.

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Patrono, C., & FitzGerald, G. A. (1997). Isoprostanes: Potential markers of oxidant stress in atherothrombotic disease. Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology. Lippincott Williams and Wilkins. https://doi.org/10.1161/01.ATV.17.11.2309

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