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Plants Used to Treat Heart Disease and Circulatory Problems

Plants Used to Treat Heart Disease and Circulatory Problems. Cardiovascular Disease. Heart disease and stroke are the principal components of cardiovascular disease Heart disease and stroke are the first and third leading causes of death in the United States

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Plants Used to Treat Heart Disease and Circulatory Problems

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  1. Plants Used to Treat Heart Disease and Circulatory Problems

  2. Cardiovascular Disease • Heart disease and stroke are the principal components of cardiovascular disease • Heart disease and stroke are the first and third leading causes of death in the United States • Account for more than 40% of all deaths • About 950,000 Americans die of cardiovascular disease each year • One death every 33 seconds • 2,600 deaths each day

  3. Cardiovascular disease • Often thought to primarily affect men and older people • However cardiovascular disease also a major killer of women and people in the prime of life • More than half of all cardiovascular disease deaths each year occur among women

  4. Death rate only part of the problem • About 61 million Americans (almost one-fourth of the population) live with this disease • Heart disease is a leading cause of disability among working adults • Stroke alone accounts for disability among more than 1 million Americans • Almost 6 million hospitalizations each year are due to cardiovascular disease

  5. Living with cardiovascular disease • The 61 million Americans with some form of cardiovascular disease include those with • high blood pressure • coronary heart disease • stroke • congestive heart failure • other conditions

  6. Economic impact of cardiovascular disease • Estimated cost of cardiovascular disease in the United States in 2001 was $298 billion, including health care expenditures and lost productivity • Costs will continues to grow as the population ages

  7. Individual level risk factors for cardiovascular disease • High Blood Pressure • High Blood Cholesterol • Tobacco Use • Physical inactivity • Poor nutrition • Obesity • Diabetes

  8. High Cholesterol Profile • Percent of Americans ages 20-74 with high serum cholesterol: 19% • Mean serum cholesterol level, mg/dl: 203 • High serum cholesterol is most prevalent among white, non-Hispanic females • High serum cholesterol is least prevalent among Black males

  9. Short List of Plants Used in Treatment • Aspirin • Digitoxin and digoxin • Statin drugs • Reserpine • Dietary remedies • Red wine • Garlic • Flavinoids, isoflavones • Monounsaturated fats

  10. Aspirin • Suppresses prostaglandins by suppressing enzyme cyclooxygenase (COX) that leads to synthesis of prostaglandins • One of prostaglandins is thromboxane which is produced in platelets in blood • Aspirin halts thromboxane production - platelets become less sticky and less likely to plug up an artery - remarkably fast and can help survival during heart attack

  11. Foxglove and heart disease • Foxglove - Digitalis purpurea • Extract called digitalis • Long history as a folk remedy for congestive heart failure (dropsy) • First mentioned in a 1542 Herbal • William Withering investigated this remedy from 1775-1785 - first scientific study of a medicinal plant

  12. William Withering • In 1785 Withering published the result of his research in a monograph • An Account of the Foxglove, and Some of Its Medical Uses, with Practical Remarks on Dropsy, and Other Diseases • Careful descriptions of his experiments on dosage and the results

  13. Digitalis purpurea • Purple foxglove - an attractive biennial with large purple bell-shaped flowers in the Scrophulariaceae • Often used as a garden ornamental • Leaves contain over 30 cardiac glycosides with digoxinand digitoxin the most significant • Concentration of glycosides highest before flowering • Leaves dried, powdered, then extracted

  14. Foxglove Digitalis purpurea

  15. Digitoxin and Digoxin • Glycosides have similar action on the heart • Follow somewhat different paths through the body • Have different levels of toxicity in the body

  16. Digitoxin

  17. Digoxin Sugars

  18. Sugars in digitalis glycosides • 2 molecules of digitose • 1 molecule of 1-acetyl digitose • 1 molecule of glucose Digitose

  19. Digitalis lanata • Although D. purpurea contains both digitoxin and digoxin, digitoxin levels are higher • Related species Digitalis lanata (wooly foxglove) is used for digoxin extraction • Both species are still used as sources of the glycosides

  20. Physiological action • Both glycosides increase strength of the contractions in the heart • Prolongs relaxation period • Lowers heart rate • Effective treatment - not a cure • Fine line between a therapeutic and toxic dose of digitalis

  21. Action • In medicinal doses, cardiac glycosides increase the contractions of heart and the force of the heart beat • Increases cardiac output - more blood pumped • Improved circulation, decreases edema, and increases kidney output • Most effective for congestive heart failure • Toxic doses cause arrhythmias or even cardiac arrest – fine line between medicinal and toxic

  22. Action • Both glycosides inhibit Na/K dependent membrane ATPase in the myocardial cells • Intracellular Ca increase and conctractile response in augmented • Binding sites for digitalis glycosides on extracellular side of enzyme. • Therapeutic levels of digitalis inhibit 10 to 30% of enzyme - toxic levels inhibit 50%

  23. Digitalis glycosides • Indicated in cases of congestive heart failure • Although some recent controversy as to whether it should be use in absence of atrial fibrillation

  24. Digitalis glycosides and blood pressure • Mixed data on effect of blood pressure • Standard believe was that glycosides increased blood pressure • Rise in Na and Ca contents of vascular smooth muscle • This induced vasoconstriction • However recent studies showed patients with lower blood pressure – especially during night

  25. Use in geriatric patients • About 13% of elderly use digitalis glycosides • Almost 20% of patients in nursing homes • Substantial risk of toxicity with 10 to 30% of hospitalized patients showing toxicity - and twofold increase in mortality • Risk of toxicity increases with age • 80% of toxicity cases over 60 yrs - have more risk factors - mortality as high as 58% with digoxin

  26. Digoxin vs Digitoxin • Digitoxin was standard until 1970s • In 1970s serum drug assay became available for digoxin and oral prepartions became more standardized • Also digoxin has shorter half-life in body • These factors led physician to believe digoxin was safe • Digoxin one of most widely prescribed drugs today much more so than digitoxin

  27. Differences in pharmacokinetics • Digitoxin is more completely and predictably absorbed from the gastrointestinal tract • Serum concentration not altered significantly by other medications or changes in renal or hepatic function • Digitoxin also has a much longer elimination time (half life 5 to 7 days as opposed to digoxin which is 1 to 2 days)

  28. Digitoxin • Highly lipophilic • Extensively bound to plasma proteins • Mainly eliminated in urine and feces • Does not accumulate during kidney dysfunction • Bioavailabilty not reduced

  29. Digoxin • Less lipophilic • Show lower protein binding • Shorter half-life • Mainly elimimiated by kidney • Accumulated quite rapidly in cases of insufficient kidney function • In patients with toxic side effects, 70% had renal insufficiency

  30. Differences in toxicity • Prospective studies show • Digoxin toxicity rates 15 to 27% • Digitoxin toxicity rates 3 to 5.8% • Recent study in Florida showed odds of toxicity three times greater for patients taking digoxin as opposed to digitoxin

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