Heart 2009;95:269-270
EDITORIALS
Angiostatin: drying out the roots in cardiac muscle
Department of Internal Medicine III, Heart Center Cologne, University of Cologne, Cologne, Germany
Dr Konrad F Frank, Department of Internal Medicine III, Heart Center Cologne, University of Cologne, Kerpener Strasse 62, 50937 Cologne, Germany; konrad.frank@uk-koeln.de
| The first 150 words of the full text of this article appear below. |
Stem and progenitor cells are promising new treatment options to enhance muscular growth and restore cardiac ventricular function in diseased heart. To date, many cell types from different sources (embryonic, bone marrow, induced pluripotent, endogenous cardiac stem cells, mesenchymal stem cells) have been used with a perspective to restore cardiac muscle after myocardial infarction and to enhance cardiac function.1 This has resulted in several studies approaching the feasibility and experimental as well as clinical benefit of modifying cardiac function by cytotherapy. Although, in clinical trials, data on long-term effects of cell transplantation in hearts with myocardial infarction are still missing, and potential side effects like generation of arrhythmias and restricted cardiac growth can still not be excluded, some of the trials both in clinical and in experimental settings have promising results regarding the partial restoration of ejection fraction after myocardial infarction.2 3 However, it remains unclear whether stem or progenitor cells
Relevant Article
- Pathological role of angiostatin in heart failure: an endogenous inhibitor of mesenchymal stem-cell activation
- K Yamahara, K D Min, H Tomoike, K Kangawa, S Kitamura, and N Nagaya
Heart 2009 95: 283-289.[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]
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