Page last updated: 2024-10-20

pyridoxamine and Myocardial Ischemia

pyridoxamine has been researched along with Myocardial Ischemia in 2 studies

Myocardial Ischemia: A disorder of cardiac function caused by insufficient blood flow to the muscle tissue of the heart. The decreased blood flow may be due to narrowing of the coronary arteries (CORONARY ARTERY DISEASE), to obstruction by a thrombus (CORONARY THROMBOSIS), or less commonly, to diffuse narrowing of arterioles and other small vessels within the heart. Severe interruption of the blood supply to the myocardial tissue may result in necrosis of cardiac muscle (MYOCARDIAL INFARCTION).

Research Excerpts

ExcerptRelevanceReference
"Pyridoxamine treatment decreased glycation and restored the activation of JNK and Akt during ischemia."1.39Pyridoxamine reverts methylglyoxal-induced impairment of survival pathways during heart ischemia. ( Almeida, F; Crisóstomo, J; Gonçalves, L; Matafome, P; Rodrigues, T; Santos-Silva, D; Seiça, R; Sena, C, 2013)

Research

Studies (2)

TimeframeStudies, this research(%)All Research%
pre-19900 (0.00)18.7374
1990's0 (0.00)18.2507
2000's1 (50.00)29.6817
2010's1 (50.00)24.3611
2020's0 (0.00)2.80

Authors

AuthorsStudies
Almeida, F1
Santos-Silva, D1
Rodrigues, T1
Matafome, P1
Crisóstomo, J1
Sena, C1
Gonçalves, L1
Seiça, R1
Boyden, PA1
Davies, SS1
Viswanathan, PC1
Amarnath, V1
Balser, JR1
Roberts, LJ1

Reviews

1 review available for pyridoxamine and Myocardial Ischemia

ArticleYear
Potential role of isoketals formed via the isoprostane pathway of lipid peroxidation in ischemic arrhythmias.
    Journal of cardiovascular pharmacology, 2007, Volume: 50, Issue:5

    Topics: Animals; Arrhythmias, Cardiac; F2-Isoprostanes; Humans; Lipid Peroxidation; Molecular Structure; Myo

2007

Other Studies

1 other study available for pyridoxamine and Myocardial Ischemia

ArticleYear
Pyridoxamine reverts methylglyoxal-induced impairment of survival pathways during heart ischemia.
    Cardiovascular therapeutics, 2013, Volume: 31, Issue:6

    Topics: Animals; Apoptosis; bcl-2-Associated X Protein; Cell Survival; Glycation End Products, Advanced; JNK

2013