| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Submitted on September 25, 2001
Accepted on January 31, 2002
From the Department of Laboratory Medicine (S.N., T.N., J.M.), Central Clinical Laboratory (H.S., H.M.), and the Third Department of Internal Medicine (K.Y., S.K.), Shimane Medical University, and the Shimane Institute of Health Science (T.N., K.Y., S.K.), Izumo, Japan.
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: nabika{at}shimane-med.ac.jp.
AbstractEffects
of smoking on white matter lesions, such as lacunar infarction and
leukoaraiosis, are still controversial. We hypothesized that the
endothelial NO synthase (eNOS) genotype was a
modulating factor for the effect of smoking on cerebral circulation. We
took a cross-sectional population from the participants of a health
examination to study the effects of smoking and a
single-nucleotide polymorphism in the eNOS gene,
T-786C. Smokers and nonsmokers were defined as having a smoking index
(cigarettes per day times years) of
200 and 0, respectively. One
hundred sixty-six male nonsmokers and 344 male smokers were recruited.
Cerebral blood flow was measured by the
133Xe inhalation method. Genotyping of
T-786C was performed by using a newly developed allele-specific
polymerase chain reaction. Smokers were exposed to greater oxidative
stress, as estimated by urinary F2-isoprostane
excretion. In smokers, CC homozygotes of T-786C showed a significant
decrease of cerebral blood flow (56.6±13.3, 57.6±11.5, and 44.0±7.2
mL/min per 100 g tissue for TT, TC, and CC, respectively;
P=0.03 by ANOVA) and a
significant increase of cerebrovascular resistance, whereas the eNOS
genotype did not affect these parameters in
nonsmokers. This result indicated that the eNOS genotype could
modify cerebrovascular circulation in a general population by
potentiating the adverse effect of
smoking.
|
ATVB Home | Subscriptions | Archives | Feedback | Authors | Help | AHA Journals Home | Search Copyright © 2002 American Heart Association, Inc. All rights reserved. Unauthorized use prohibited. |