- Subtherapeutic, low-dose fluvastatin improves functional and morphological arterial wall properties in apparently healthy, middle-aged males--a pilot study.
Subtherapeutic, low-dose fluvastatin improves functional and morphological arterial wall properties in apparently healthy, middle-aged males--a pilot study.
Early arterial wall changes are already present in the apparently healthy, middle-aged population and continuously progress with age. The aim of our study was to investigate whether 30 days low-dose fluvastatin treatment could improve and reverse these arterial changes that are primarily associated with ageing, in otherwise healthy middle-aged males. In a double blind, randomized study, 50 middle-aged males received either placebo or fluvastatin (10mg) for 30 days. Brachial artery flow-mediated dilation (FMD), pulse wave velocity (PWV) and β-stiffness of the common carotid artery were measured on the 1st, 14th and 30th day of the study using an Aloka instrument by integrated eTracking. In 77% of subjects, impaired endothelial function was revealed at inclusion in the study. All the parameters were improved already after 14 days, and after 30 days of treatment FMD improved by 91.5 ± 15.6%, while PWV and β-stiffness improved by 6.2 ± 1.1% and 10.7 ± 1.5%, respectively (all P<0.001). After therapy discontinuation, the beneficial effects progressively decreased, but were still detectable after 5 months. During the study the lipid profile remained unchanged, thus the beneficial effects obtained were attributed to the pleiotropic effects of fluvastatin. We found that subtherapeutic low-dose fluvastatin (10mg daily; 30 days) considerably improves and reverses early functional and morphological arterial wall impairments that are present in apparently healthy, middle-aged males. It might be supposed that such a new and original approach could be valuable in cardiovascular prevention.