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Plasma extracellular superoxide dismutase levels in an Australian population with coronary artery disease
Authors:XL Wang  T Adachi  AS Sim  DE Wilcken
Affiliation:Department of Cardiovascular Medicine, University of New South Wales, Prince Henry/Prince of Wales Hospitals, Sydney, Australia. x.l.wang@unsw.edu.au
Abstract:In vitro experiments suggest that free radicals may contribute importantly to atherogenesis. Superoxide dismutase (SOD), particularly extracellular SOD (EC-SOD), which accounts for the majority of SOD biological activity, is a major superoxide scavenger. We explored factors that may affect plasma EC-SOD levels measured by ELISA and assessed the association between plasma EC-SOD and coronary artery disease documented angiographically in 590 white Australian patients 400 ng/mL were heterozygous for the Arg213-->Gly mutation at the EC-SOD gene; there was also a positive correlation with age (r=0.131, P=0.0016). Plasma EC-SOD in current smokers (75. 0+/-9.3 ng/mL) was much lower than in nonsmokers (111.7+/-8.2 ng/mL, P<0.01), and ex-smokers had intermediate levels (84.3+/-7.1 ng/mL). Levels were significantly lower in patients with than in those without a history of acute myocardial infarction (MI) (76.1+/-7.5 versus 110.1+/-6.0 ng/mL, P<0.05), and low plasma EC-SOD was independently associated with an increased likelihood of a history of MI (OR, 2.04; 95% CI, 1.10 to 3.82); higher EC-SOD levels also tended to be associated with delayed onset of MI. In conclusion, our study establishes that in patients assessed by coronary angiography, circulating EC-SOD is lower in men than in women and in smokers of each sex and that low levels are independently associated with a history of MI. These findings are consistent with EC-SOD's being protective and contributing to reduced coronary risk.
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