Cyclosporin suppresses transplant arteriosclerosis in the aorta-allografted, cholesterol-clamped rabbit: Suppression preceded by decrease in arterial lipoprotein permeability

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Abstract

The immunosuppressant cyclosporin has been suggested to aggravate as well as retard the development of transplant arteriosclerosis, the major long-term problem for patients with heart transplants. We examined the effect of human therapeutic levels of blood cyclosporin on the development of experimental transplant arteriosclerosis. The thoracic aorta from one rabbit was transplanted as an end-to-side bypass on the abdominal aorta of another rabbit, and plasma cholesterol was clamped at 5 to 7 mmol/L. Cyclosporin markedly suppressed the severity of transplant arteriosclerosis, judged both biochemically and histologically: cholesterol content in aortic transplants was reduced by 70% and 80% after 10 days and 20 days of cholesterol feeding, respectively (both comparisons, P

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Andersen, H. Ø., Madsen, G., Nordestgaard, B. G., Hansen, B. F., Kjeldsen, K., & Stender, S. (1994). Cyclosporin suppresses transplant arteriosclerosis in the aorta-allografted, cholesterol-clamped rabbit: Suppression preceded by decrease in arterial lipoprotein permeability. Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology, 14(6), 944–950. https://doi.org/10.1161/01.ATV.14.6.944

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