机构:[1]Department of Neurology, Xuanwu Hospital, Capital Medical University, Beijing, China神经科系统神经内科首都医科大学宣武医院[2]The Hatter Cardiovascular Institute, University College London, United Kingdom[3]National Heart Research Institute Singapore, National Heart Centre Singapore[4]Yong Loo Lin School of Medicine, National University Singapore[5]Cardiovascular and Metabolic Disorders Program, Duke-National University of Singapore Medical School[6]Department of Neurology, Medical College of Georgia, Augusta University[7]Department of Neurosurgery, Xuanwu Hospital, Capital Medical University, Beijing, China神经科系统神经外科首都医科大学宣武医院[8]Beijing Key Laboratory of Hypoxic Conditioning Translational Medicine, Xuanwu Hospital, Capital Medical University, China科技平台低氧适应转化医学北京市重点实验室首都医科大学宣武医院
Remote ischemic conditioning (RIC) has been investigated as a promising, safe, and well-tolerated nonpharmacological therapy for cardio-cerebrovascular disease over the past 3 decades; variable results have been found when it is used in cerebrovascular versus cardiovascular disease. For patients with cardiovascular disease, milestone studies suggest that the roles of RIC may be limited. Recently, however, 2 large trials investigating RIC in patients with cerebrovascular disease found promising results, which may reignite the field's research prospects after its setbacks in the cardiovascular field. This perspectives article highlights several important clinical trials of RIC in the cardio-cerebrovascular disease and describes the many challenges of RIC in clinical translation. Finally, based on the available evidence, several promising research directions such as chronic RIC, early initiation in target population, improvement of compliance, better understanding of dosing, and identification of specific biomarkers are proposed and should be investigated before RIC can become applied into clinical practice for patient benefit.
基金:
This work received funding from the National Natural Science Foundation of
China (No. 82001257 awarded to Dr Zhao), the National Institutes of Health
(RF1NS122863 and R01NS112511 awarded to Dr Hess), and Beijing Natural
Science Foundation (JQ22020 awarded to Dr Zhao). Dr Hausenloy is supported
by the Duke-NUS Signature Research Programme funded by the Ministry
of Health, Singapore Ministry of Health’s National Medical Research Council
under its Singapore Translational Research Investigator Award (MOH-STaR-
21jun-0003), Center Grant scheme (NMRC CG21APR1006), and Collaborative
Center Grant scheme (NMRC/CG21APRC006).
第一作者机构:[1]Department of Neurology, Xuanwu Hospital, Capital Medical University, Beijing, China
通讯作者:
通讯机构:[7]Department of Neurosurgery, Xuanwu Hospital, Capital Medical University, Beijing, China[8]Beijing Key Laboratory of Hypoxic Conditioning Translational Medicine, Xuanwu Hospital, Capital Medical University, China[*1]Department of Neurosurgery, Xuanwu Hospital, Capital Medical University, No. 45, Changchun St, Xicheng District, Beijing, 100053, China
推荐引用方式(GB/T 7714):
Zhao Wenbo,Hausenloy Derek J,Hess David C,et al.Remote Ischemic Conditioning: Challenges and Opportunities[J].STROKE.2023,54(8):2204-2207.doi:10.1161/STROKEAHA.123.043279.
APA:
Zhao Wenbo,Hausenloy Derek J,Hess David C,Yellon Derek M&Ji Xunming.(2023).Remote Ischemic Conditioning: Challenges and Opportunities.STROKE,54,(8)
MLA:
Zhao Wenbo,et al."Remote Ischemic Conditioning: Challenges and Opportunities".STROKE 54..8(2023):2204-2207