CA1290692C - Substrate composition for treating atherosclerosis - Google Patents
Substrate composition for treating atherosclerosisInfo
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- CA1290692C CA1290692C CA000546421A CA546421A CA1290692C CA 1290692 C CA1290692 C CA 1290692C CA 000546421 A CA000546421 A CA 000546421A CA 546421 A CA546421 A CA 546421A CA 1290692 C CA1290692 C CA 1290692C
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- amino acids
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- active amino
- arginine
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- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A61—MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
- A61K—PREPARATIONS FOR MEDICAL, DENTAL OR TOILETRY PURPOSES
- A61K38/00—Medicinal preparations containing peptides
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- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A61—MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
- A61K—PREPARATIONS FOR MEDICAL, DENTAL OR TOILETRY PURPOSES
- A61K31/00—Medicinal preparations containing organic active ingredients
- A61K31/185—Acids; Anhydrides, halides or salts thereof, e.g. sulfur acids, imidic, hydrazonic or hydroximic acids
- A61K31/19—Carboxylic acids, e.g. valproic acid
- A61K31/195—Carboxylic acids, e.g. valproic acid having an amino group
-
- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A61—MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
- A61K—PREPARATIONS FOR MEDICAL, DENTAL OR TOILETRY PURPOSES
- A61K38/00—Medicinal preparations containing peptides
- A61K38/01—Hydrolysed proteins; Derivatives thereof
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- Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
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- Proteomics, Peptides & Aminoacids (AREA)
- Acyclic And Carbocyclic Compounds In Medicinal Compositions (AREA)
- Exposure Of Semiconductors, Excluding Electron Or Ion Beam Exposure (AREA)
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The present invention provides for a substrate composition for treating atherosclerosis which substantially lowers plasma cholesterol and substantially reverses arterial plaque deposition and degenerative changes associated with atherosclerosis. The substrate composi-tions include solutions of biologically active amino acids as the antiatherosclerotic agent.
The present invention provides for a substrate composition for treating atherosclerosis which substantially lowers plasma cholesterol and substantially reverses arterial plaque deposition and degenerative changes associated with atherosclerosis. The substrate composi-tions include solutions of biologically active amino acids as the antiatherosclerotic agent.
Description
The present invention relates generally to compositions and methods for treating atherosclerosis; more particularly, it relates to methods and substrate compositions for treating atheroscierosis whereby the many and varied prob~ems associated with the disease can be arrested, substantially alleviated or even to a certain extent cured. Still more particularly, the present invention utilizes mixtures of biologically active levo-rotary ~L-form) amino acids to accomplish these results.
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In the United States and Western Europe, cardiovascular disease and its associated maladies, dysfunctions and - complications are a principal cause of disability and the chief cause of death. One specific entity significantly contributing to this pathophysiologic process is atherosclerosis, which has been generally recognized as the leading health care problem both with respect to mortality and health care costs. During each of the past five years more than 550,000 deaths have occurred annually in the United States alone as a result of coronary artery disease.
Additionally more than 680,000 hospitalizations for myocardial infarction, the major complication of atherosclerosis, occur annually, and the number is steadily increasing. In recent years, more people in the United States have died as a result of atherosclerosis than of cancer, trauma and infectious diseases combined.
In 1983, the direct health care costs for the management of patients with coronary heart disease in the United States exceeded $8 billion. During the same period the total economic cost to this nation as a result of coronary heart disease as a manifestation of atherosclerosis alone was in excess of $60 billion and for 1987 is estimated to reach $96 billion. These costs do not even reflect the expense required for the management or treatment of the many and varied non-cardiac, atherosclerosis induced conditions.
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Atherosclerosis is a disease characterized by the deposition of fatty substances, primarily cholesterol, and subsequent fibrosis in the inner layer ~intima) of an artery, resulting in plaque deposition on the surface of, and degenerative changes in, an arterial wall. The ubi~uitous arterial fatty plaque is the earliest lesion of atherosclerosis, often found even in children, and is a grossly flat, lipid-rich atheroma consisting of both macrophages (white blood cells) and some smooth muscle fibers. The fibrous plaque representative of - 10 the various forms of advanced atherosclerosis has increased intimal smooth muscle cells surrounded by a connective and extracellular lipid. At the luminal surface of the artery, this plaque or lesion is usually covered by a dense fibrous cap of smooth muscle or connective tissue. Beneath the fibrous cap, the lesions are highly cellular consisting of macrophages, other leukocytes and smooth muscle cells. Deep in this cell-rich region may be areas of cholesterol crystals, necrotic debris and calcination.
If the disease is allowed to progress, it can cause narrowing and obstruction of the lumen o-E the artery resulting in diminished or occluded blood flow and, consequently, ischemia or infarction of the predominantly affected organ or anatomical part such as the brain heart intestine or extremities. The result can be significant loss of function, loss of cellular substance, e..,2rgency med~cal and/or surgical procedures, and significant disability or death.
Alternatively, the arterial wall can be severely weakened by the infiltration of the muscular layer with the lipid (cholesterol), inflammatory white blood cells, connective tissue and calcium, resulting in soft and/or brittle areas which can become segmentally dilated (aneurysmal) and rupture or crack leading to organ, limb or even life-threathening hemorrhage.
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While the basic definitive cause or causes of atherosclerosis are not fully known or understood, it has been hypothesized that this disorder is related to the plasma cholesterol and lipid levels based on empiric clinical observations of may investigators and medical practitioners. Consequently, one of the currently favoured regimens for treating atherosclerosis consists of medication, dietary management, behavior modification and exercise aimed at controlling and reducing the plasma cholesterol levels.
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Common medications used to lower plasma cholesterol levels include Atromid- ~ (clofibrate), Choloxi ~ (dextrothyroxine sodium), Colestid~ (colestipol hydrochloride), Lopid~
(gemfibrozil), Lorelco (probucol), Nicolar (niacin/nicotinic -- acid) and Questra ~ (cholestyamine resin). These drugs, and the treatment in general, however are directed only at the cause and not the result of atherosclerosis and have no~ been shown to be effective in reversing the plaque deposition and degenerative changes in the arterial walls. The pharmacologic agents also have many other shortcomings such as, for example, adverse side effects (hypertension, cardiac arrhymthmias, gastrointestinal disturbances, headache, hypersensitivity, etc.), contraindications (heart, liver or kidney disease, pregnancy, etc.), requirement for lifelong conscientious administration, difficulty in maintaining 2~ consistent pa~iel.t comp iance, variakle reliability and high cost.
Once the disease has progressed tot he stage of significant persistent symptoms and compromised function, the next treatment step has conventionally been artery bypass grafting to repair and/or replace the damaged artery. While coronary artery bypass has become one of the more common major cardiovascular surgical procedures in the United States, surgery clearly is not the solution to the pathologic process since it has no arresting or reversing effect on the progress of the disease and only temporarily overcomes the most critically affected artery or arteries by bypassing them, if possible. Moreover, there is a significant risk of morbidity and mortality associated with surgery which many patients are reluctant to accept. Indeed, the disease may continue to progress even as the operation is being performed, and the autogenous veins or arteries used to bypass the disease impaired arteries undergo athersc:Lerosis changes postoperatively generally at a faster rate than the original, affected arteries. Furthermore, the conclusion reached by the Coronary-Artery Surgery Study (CASS) sponsored by the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute (NHLBI) is that there is no overall statistical benefit in the survival rate or the rate of development of myocardial infarction between the surgically and medically treated groups of patients.
As an alternative to coronary bypass surgery, it has been suggested that certain medications and procedures may be used to treat the results of atherosclerossis and not just the cause. These treatments include chelation with ethylene diamine tetraacetic acid (EDTA) and percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty (PTCA). EDTA treatments, however, are still experimental, unproven and potentially as harmful as they are beneficial. PTCA treatments are invasive, of limited application and success and occasionally manifest leinai complica~ions. Highly e~perimental intra-arterial laser beam plaque vaporization has limited application and requires an open operative approach to affected vessels.
It has now been surprisingly discovered that parenterally administered solutions comprising certain mixtures of biologically active amino acids are effective in both markedly reducing plasma cholesterol levels and arresting and reversing arterial plaque deposition and degenerative vascualar changes associatee with atherosclerosis.
_ D, -69~2 Certain amino acid solutions have been parenterally administered intravenously during the past three to four decades for a variety of medical reasons. Total Parenteral Nutrition (TPN), or intravenous hyperalimentation, is now a widely accepted technique for management of nutritional and metabolic problems in patients whose absorption and assimilation of adequate or optimal nutritional substrate cannot or should not be achieved via the alimentary tract.
Indeed, use of this technique, pioneered by the present - 10 inventor, has been successful in supporting normal growth and development in infants and in one child for more than fifteen years since birth.
Currently, a number of standard TPN solutions are commercially available in the United States, including those sold under the trade name TRAVOSOL (Travenol Laboratories), FREAMINE (McGaw Laboratories), AMINOSYN (Abbot Laboratories) and NOVAMINE (Cutter Medical, Division of Miles Laboratories). These standard intravenous feeding solutions are designed to be nutriously balanced, that is, they are formulated to provide all of the caloric, protein (amino acid), vitamin, mineral, water and trace element requirements of the average patient. The components of these solutions are also available in modular form, allowing the physician and pharmacist to formulate special solutions tailored to the specific needs OI patien~s du ng the course of their management. Essential fatty acids and additonal calories in the form of a lipid can also be administered separately intravenously as fortified emulsions of soybean or safflower oil in order to meet specific nutritional requirements. In patients with renal failure, hepatic failure or severe stress, special intravenous formulations of amino acids are also commer~ially available for infusion as an adjunct to the management of these conditions. For example, U.S. Patent No.
3,832,465 describes an amino acid solution for nutrional use -~o~g~
and U.S. Patent No. 3,950,529 describes administration of amino acids to patients having liver disease.
No suggestion has been made, however, that parenterally administered biologically active amino acid solutions might be used to treat atherosclerosis, particularly with respect to the reversal of the detrimental complications associated with the disease.
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It is, therefore, an object of the present invention to provide amino acid compositions for treating atherosclerosis whereby not only the plasma cholesterol levels (contributing cause) are lowered, but also the plaque deposition and degenerative arterial changes (results) and secondary complications associated with the disease cna be substantially arrested, reversed or even to a certain extent cured.
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~ he present invention also provides amino acid composition~
for treating atherosclerosis which do not produce the m~ny side effects of conventional dru~ treatments and can effectively decrease or even eliminate the need for major surgery or other interventional procedures in most atherosclerosis patients.
In accordance with the present invention, there are provided substrate compositions for use in treating atherosclerosis, a disease I characterized by the deposition of fatty substances in, and fibrosis o~, the inner layer of an artery resulting in plaque deposition on and degenerative changes in an arterial wall. The compositions of the present inven-tion are particularly advantageous in that they work to both sigr.ificantly lower plasma cholesterol levels and substantially arrest, reverse and, to a certain extent, even cure the arterial plaque deposition and degenerative vascular wall changes associated with atherosclerosis.
Specifically, the present invention provides for an antiathero-sclerotic agent for lowering plasma cholesterol levels and reversing arterial plaque deposition and degenerative changes associated with atherosclerosis, consisting essentially of a mixture of biologically 20 active amino acids, said mixture comprising:
From about 3~ to about 10~ isoleuc~ne From about 3% to about 10% leucine From about 2.5% to about 7.5% lysine From about 2.5~ to about 7.5~ methionine From about 3~ to about 10% phenylalanine From about 1~ to about 4% threonine From about 1~ to about 3% tryptophan From about 3~ to ~bout 10% valine From about 2~ to a~out 20~ alanine From about 7~ to about 20% arginine From about 1~ to about 4~ histidine From about 0~ to about 10~ proline From about 0~ to about 8~ serine From about 0% to about 1~ tyrosine From about 0~ to about 10~ glycine From about 0% to about 6% glutamic acid From about 0% to about 6~ aspartie acid From about 0~ to about 1% cysteine 9~6g~
by weight based upon the total weight of said biologically active amino acids in said mixture.
Additionally, the present invention provides for aqueous solutions comprising said antiatherosclerotic composition for parenteral administration.
The compositions of the present invention comprise in their overall concept, at least in part an active antiatherosclerotic agent which in turn comprises a mixture of biologically active (L-form) amino acids. This mixture more preferably comprises at least arginine and the branched chain amino acids 7 isoleucine, leucine and valine, with arginine preferably being present within the mixture in the greatest weight percentage based upon the total weight of the amino acids in the mixture. Even more - 8a -~L~9~ 2 preferably the mixture also includes lysine, methionine, phenylalanien, threonine, tryptophan and histidine. Most preferably, the mixture also includes alanine, proline, serine, typrosine, glycine, glutamic acid, aspartic acid and cysteine.
The compositions of the present invention may also comprise, in addition to the amino acid mixture, other nutrients or additives such as vitamins, minerals, electrolytes, carbohydrates, antibiotics, antic:oagulents and the like as required by the specific needs of a patient.
The compositions.of the present invention are preferably administered parenterally in the form of an aqueous solutios through a central venous catheter due to the hypertonic nature of the preferred aqueous solutions. The daily ration of the aqueous solution is further preferably administered continuously and constantly intraveneously by an intraveneous infusion pump.
The primary advantages of this invention over the other methods of managing patients with athersclerosis include the following: plasma cholesterol levels can be lowered more promptly and to a greater extent than heretofore achieved with any previous thereapeutic modality; the degree and exient of atherosclerosis plaque regression i9 greater than has ever been demonstrated previously; the duration of theraphy required to reverse the atherosclerosis plaque is relatively short compared with the duration of time over which the plaque had originally developed; all of the solution ingredients are biologically active nutrient substrates with negligible toxicity or adverse side effects when administered in g _ the proposed dosage ranges; the cost/effectiveness and cost/bene-fit ratios compare favorably with pharmacologic and surgical approaches to treating atherosclerosis; the therapy can be ini-tiated and carried out entirely on an outpatient basisi and the method addresses and attacks the basic pathophysiology of athero-sclerosis primarily and biochemically rather than pharmacologi-cally or by dealing only with complications of atherosclerosis surgically.
These and other features and advantages of the present invention will be more readily understood by those skilled in the art from a reading of the following detailed description and examples with reference to the accompanying drawing.
Fig. 1 is a graphical representation of the daily plasma total cholesterol levels of the human patient whose treatment is described in Example 2 demonstrating the responses elicited by changes in the formulation of the infusate.
As stated, the present invention provides substrate compo-sitions for treating atherosclerosis which, as also previously mentioned, is a disease characterized by the deposition of fatty substances, primarily cholesterol, as plaque and subsequent fibrosis in the inner layer (intima) of an artery.
Atherosclerosis, as set forth above, is believed to be related at least in part to plasma cholesterol and lipid levels. The 06~
compositions and methods of the present invention are particularly effective in both lowering plasma cholesterol levels (contributing cause) and also in reversing the arterial plaque deposition and degenerative changes (result) to substantially arrest, alleviate and, to a certain extent, even cure the many and varied problems, conditions and secondary complicationsd associated with the disease.
The compositions of the present invention, in their overal . concept, are comprised of biological substrates including at least, in part, an active antiatherosclerosis agent.
Antiatherosclerosis, as used herein, refers to both the lowering of plasma cholesterol levels and the arrest and reversal of arterial plaque deposition and degenerative arterial wall changes. The active antiatherosclerosis agent, in the preferred embodiment, is a mixture of biologically active amino acids, preferably L-form amino acids.
Biologically active amino acids are generally classified as either essential or nonessential. Essential amino acids are those that cannot be synthesized within the body and must be ingested in adequate amounts in the diet. Non-essential amino acids, conversely, are those that can be synthesized biochemically within the body from other substrate sources.
The amino acids most commonly classified as essential include -isoleucin~e~ leùclne, lys-ine, m2thionine, phenylalanine, threonine, tryptophan and valine. The amino acids most commonly classified as non essential include alanine, arginine, histidine, proline, serine, tyrosine, glycine, glutamic acid, aspartic acid and cysteine. Arginine and histidine have been classified as semiessential in that they appear to be essential for infants and to some extent in the presence of renal failure.
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These bioliogically active amino acids also exist in dextrorotary or D-form and levorotatory or L-form. The L-form is considerably more biologically active than the D-form and is, therefore, preferred for use as the antiatherosclerosis agent.
The substrate compositions of the present invention are placed in an aqueous solution which, in turn, is parenterally administered to a patient as the treatment. When so administered, the compositions of the present invention result in substantial lowering of plasma cholesterol levels and substantial reversal of the arterial plaque deposition on, and degenerative changes in, the arterial system.
The antiatherosclerosis agent preferably is a mixture of at least arginine, isoleucine, leucine and valine, preferably with arginine being present in the greatest weight percentage based upon the total weight of the biologically active amino acids in the mixture. These amino acids preferably comprise at least about 25% by weight of the amino acids present, but can, for brief infusion periods, be the sole active ingredients. The mixture may also include various of the other amino acids. Most preferably, all of the above-listed - amino acids are present within the mixture to provide administration of all of the amino acids along with other ingredients in a nut.ionally balan-ed )6~2 solution. All of these ingredients are a part of TPN solutions but, surprisinyly, increased levels of the branched chain amino acids an~ arginine, often coupled with the reduction of zmounts of histidine in the amino acid mixture, results in prompt (usual-ly about one week) dramatic (usually 40~ to 60%) reduction i~plasma cholesterol. Also of note is the reduction of the sim-plest amino acids, particularly alanine and glycine, most partic-ularly glycine, from TPN solutions.
The amino acids are included in the preferred amino acid mixtures in the approximate weis~ht percentage ranges based upon the total weight of the amino acids in the mixture as set forth in Ta~le I belowj.
T~3LE I
15 Amino Acid Approximate Amino Acid Approximate Weight % Weight Isoleucine 3 - 10 Alanine 2 - 20 Leucine 3 - 10 Histidine 1 - 4 Lysine 2.5 - 7.5 Proline 0 - 10 Hethionine 2.5 - 7.5 Serine 0 - 8 Phenvlalanine 3 - iO Tyrosine 0 - i Threonine 1 - 4 Glycine 0 - 10 Tryptophan 1 - 3 Glutamic Acid 0 - 6 Valine 3 - 10 Aspartic Acid 0 - 6 Ar~inine 7 - 20 Cysteine 0 - 1 Note the non-essential amino acids listed above as being optional ingredients in the broad sense of this invention may contribute less to atherosclerosis recovery than the other species. The same may hold true for alanine and the non-3~ branched chai~ essential amino acids. These amino acids, ! however, are important from a nutritional point of view when patient treatment '``` - 13 -, .
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extends over a period of months. As such, these a~ino acids may be added in greater or lesser a~ounts than listed above without materially affectin~ or altering the ch3racteristics and advan-tages of the solution and, therefore, without departing from practicing the present invention. Thus, a more prererred amino acid ~ixture comprises of the following amino acids present in the following approximate wEight percentages b2sed upon the total weisht of the amino acids in the mixture as set forth in Table II below.
TABLE II
Amino Acid Approximate Amino Acid Approximate Weight % Weight ~
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Isoleucine 4 - 10 Alanine 7 - 16 Leucine 5 - 10 Histidine1.5 - 3.5 lS Lysine 4.S - 6.5 Proline 4.5 - 8.
~ethionine 3.5 - 5.5 Serine 2.5 - 6.
Phenylalanine 4.5 - 7.5 Tvrosine 0 - 1 Threonine 2 - 3.5 Glycine 3 - 8 Tryptophan 1 - 2.5 Glutamic Acid 3.5 - 5.5 20 Valine 4 - 9 Aspartic Acid 2 - 4 Arginine 9 - 18 Cysteine 0 - 1 The amino acid mixtures are preferably accomplished by mixing the crystalline forms of the amino acids, usually the acetate, chloride and hydrochloride salt. A balance of the 2'~ ions used in the salts is required to avoid upsetting the acid/base balance within the body of the patient; usually about 80% acetate and 2Q% chloride and hydrochloride.
Usually the pH of the solution of the invention will range from about 5.0 to about 7.8 but preferably will be adjusted to the pH of blood, approximately 7.39, by the addition of a suitable non-toxic organic compound. The .
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crystalline form of amino acid is preferred due to i-ts high purity and the precise, reproducible formations which can be produced from such. Further, solutions made from the crystalline form can be directly assimilated into the body without preliminary biological ac:tion within the body. the mixture of amino acids can also he formulated using commercially available parenteral nutrition (TPN) solutions and adding amino acids, preferably in crystalline form, to achieve solutions of the invention. Preferred TPN solutions include those sold under the traclemark Travaso ~.
Additionally, the compositions of the present invention may include other essential nutrients such as vitamins, minerals, electrolytes, carbohydrates, antibiotics, anticoagulants and the like as required for nutritional, antibacterial and anticlotting purposes and other biological supports as will be recognized by one skilled in the art. As in substantially all biological applications, however, the most preferred compositions will be patient specific, that is, the actual amino acid mixture may be varied based upon a variety of factors which normally determine medication compositions and dosages such as, for example, the reaction of the specific patient to the composition; the tolerance of the specific patient to the individual and combined components; the stage and extent of the disease; the predominant organ(s) or system(s) adversely affected by the disease; the primary biological functions adversely affected by the disease and/or its complications; the existence, nature and extent of ~r 9~
concomitant malnutrition, the comprehensive clinical symptom complex of the patient; the stage of the recovery and from surgical or other procedure attemps at alleviating signs and symptoms of the disease and/or its complications; the age, sex and general condition of the patient; the presence of other concomitant disorders (diahetes mellitus, familial hyperlipidemia, etc.); and other factors as will be appreciated by those skilled in the art.
- These factors are all related to the ability of a patient to utilize or tolerate the amino acid mixture and other components of the compositions of the present invention. In other words, each patient may require some adjustment of specific ingredients at various stages during the treatment as a result of one or more of the above-listed factors. For example, a diabetic may not be able to tolerate as high a caloric content in the form of a sugar as a person without diabetes. As another example, it is known that the amino acid requirement of a person with renal or liver failure are different from those of a person without these conditions.
As still another example, a person suffering from malnutrition amy require greater amounts of, and different, amino acids and other nutrients than a well-nourished person.
One skilled in the art will be able to recognize these special needs and be able to adjust the compositions of the present invention accordingly.
Other adjustments to the amino acid mixture may be determined from blood and urine amino acid profiles. These profiles . ~
are indicative of how the body is utilizing a specific amino acid, and any deficiency or excess can be determined from such profiles and compensated for by altering the amino acid mixture. one skilled in the art will be able to make the desired adjustments accordingly one such an amino profile has been determined. The amino acid profile is adjusted in response to blood and urine analysis to determine the utilization of the amino acids by the body of the patient.
It has been found that the antiatherosclerotic effect is - 10 largely determined by the amount of branched chain amino acids and arginine in the treatment. The significance of arginine as an important amino acid has heretofore been overlooked but, surprisingly, in the practice of this invention has emerged as an important contributor.
The compositions of the presen invention are preferably administered parenterally in the form of an aqueous intravenous solution. The aqueous solutiion, therefore, comprises the composition as an additive solute in solution with an aqueous solvent base. The aqueous solvent base preferably comprises a sterile, ion-free water base to which may be added a variety of components depending upon the composition o~ the amino acid mixture and the specific needs of the individual patient. For example, if the composition does not have sufficient caloric value and the patient requires additional caloric intake, the aqueous solvent base may be a dextrose-water, fructose-water or invert sugar-water solution (equal parts of dextrose and fructose) including variable concentrations of the carbohydrate substrates chosen to i~4369~
meet the caloric needs of the patient. The solutions are compounded using established aseptic, antiseptic and pharmacochemical techniques well known to those skllled in the art to insure the complete solubility of the ingredients while maintaining the stabiltiy, sterility, safety and preferred formulation for the individual patients.
It is preferable that the active antiatheroscerotic agent, that is, the amino acid mixture, be present in solution in an effective amount which, when the solutiion is parenterally administered using hyperalimentation techniques well known to those skilled in the art, results in substantial lowering of plasma cholesterol and substantial reversal of arterial plaque depositiion and degenerative arterial wall changes after a relatively short period of adminisitration, usually within two to six months while at the same time providing the body of the patient nutrition necessary to sustain life. The amino acid mixture is present within the aqueous solution in concentrations ranging from as low as about 4 grams total weight of amino acids per 100 ml of solution ( a 4% by weight solution~ up to the solubility limits of the specific amino acid mixture within the particular aqueous solvent (sometimes as high as a 20% by weight in solution~. Preferably, the amino acid mixture is present within the solution in concentrations ranging from about 7.5 to about 12 grams total weight of amino acids per 100 ml of solution (a 7.5% to 12%
by weight solution). These concentrations will result in a hypertonic solution (800 to 1100 milliosmols per liter), that is, a :
~ - 18 -~ 069:2 solution having a higher osmotic pressure than blood (290 to 310 mill8iosmols per liter), the significance of which is discussed below. For the specific effective compostion described above, it is preferable that the amino acid mixture be present in solution in a concentration of from about 9 to 11, more preferably from about 10 to 11, grams of amino acids per 100 ml of solution.
The aqueous solutions of the present invention are - administered parenterally since the oral route has a number of disadvantages. When administered orally, the amino acids are subjected to the modifying digestive actions of the stomach, intestinal tract, pancreas and liver; the endogenous cycle exterts a buffering effect on the components of the formulation; the pattern of solutions to be administered is difficult to determine in order that the resultant blood levels of the active antiatherosclerosis agents be achieved identical to those induced by direct intravenous infusion;
and methods of controlling precise levels of intake are difficult to establish and maintain. By parenteral administration, a direct assault can be lauched against target tissues, and in some instances it is even possible to isolate a part of the body and perfuse it with the amino acid solution for hours, days or wèeks without drastically altering the patient's normal nutritional patterns.
Furthermore, parenteral administration permits constant, controlled administration, thus ensuring a continuity of effect without the nadirs or zeniths which G;9;~
inevitably occur following oral or enteral administration and - subsequent absorptlon and assimilation.
Since the preferred aqueous solution will be hypertonic (about 800 to about 1100 milliosmols per liter), theses solutions should be administered intravenously through a large diameter blood vessel having a high blood flow for substantially instant dilution, most preferably through a central venous catheter inserted percutaneously into the superior vena cava by any one of several acceptable methods known to those skilled in the art. A particularly preferred method of catheter insertion is described in the article by O'Donnell, Claque and Dudrick entitled "Percutaneous Insertion of a Cuffed Catheter with a Long Subcutaneous Tunnel for Intravenous Hyperalimentation," published in Southern Medical Journal, Volume 76, No. 11 (1983), pages 1344-48.
After catheterization has been achieved, continuous infusion of the aqueous antiatherosclerosis solution can begin. The total daily solution ration for the individual patient is preferably administered in an amount sufficient to provide the patient with between about 0.25 and about 3.5 grams amino acids, more preferably between about 1 and about 2 grams amino acids, per kilogram of body weight per 24-hour day.
This solution ration is also preferably administered continuously and constantly intravenously by commercially available intravenous infusion pumps to maintain a consistent amino acid level within the body.
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During the course of extended infusion theraphy, generally from about two months to about eight months, the patient preferably will not ingest any additional nutrient substrates which can affect the amino acid balance or metabolism within the body. The patient will be allowed to drink non-nutrient fluids and to ingest whatever oral medications which may be required during the course of the theraphy. In selected patients, it will be feasible to infuse the solutioin on an ambulatory or outpatient basis using portable lightweight pumps and custom made support apparatus for the solution, infusion tubing and pump. In even more highly selected patients, it may be preferable to infuse the entire daily ration of solution in 12-16 hours of the 24 hour day, allowing the patients to disconnect themselves from the pump and infusion apparatus for eight to twelve hours in order to increase their freedom and activities during the non-infusion periods. Whenever the patient is disconnected from the infusion tubing, it will be necessary to instill 1-2 ml of the solutioin containing about 100 units heparin per ml into the central catheter and cap it with a sterile cap (for example, Luer-loc ~ to prevent occulusion of the catheter with a blood clot.
During the first few weeks of infusion of the antiatherosclerosis solution, the patient should be monitored biochemically, hematoologically and metabolically every 1-3 days via blood and urine specimens. Serum and/or ~rine amino acid profiles may be be obtained from the specimens as desired and the amino acid mixtures adjusted accordingly.
When initial stability of these ~'~
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indices has been achieved in response to the aqueous solution infusiion and any indicated changes made in the initial composition of the solution, the intervals of monitoring can be extended to every 1-2 weeks.
Other indices to be monitored include the following: serum cholesterol, cholesterol esters, apoliopoprotein A, apolipoprotein B, high density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol, triglycerides, sodium, potassium, chloride, bicarbonate, - creatinine, calcium, inorganic phosphorus, glucose, urea nitrogen, uric acid, total protein, albumin, bilirubin, alkaline phosphatase, LDH, SGOT, SGPT, GGT, CPK, magnesium, zinc copper, blood prothrombin time, partial thromboplastin time, leukocyte count, erythrocyte count, hemoglobin, hematocrit, means corpuscular volume, means corpuscular hemoglobin, mean corpuscular hemoglobin concentration differential leukocyte count and platelet count. These standard tests are used individually, in various combinations and collectively to ensure the safety and efficacy of the treatment, to maintain homostasis and to further assist the clinician in adusting the solution specifically for the individual patient.
The foregoing detailed discussion of this inYention will be further exemplified by the following specific examples offered by way of illustration and not limitation fo the above described ~, ~9~;9~
Example 1 Attempts to implicate cholesterol as one of the primary etiologic agents in atherogenesis have been impaired somewhat by the inability to reduce and maintain lowered serum cholesterol levels by dietary and/or chemotherapeutic means alone. In a series of preliminary investigations, an animal model of atherosclerosis was developed over a period of several years by modifying the diet of New Zealand albino rabbits. Using several hundred male and female rabbits in a variety of studies while sequent:ially and logically modifying the diets, a consistent and reliable animal model was developed for inducing atherogenesis in these rabbits which simulated the distribution, various stages and severity, gross morphology and histologic characteristics, primary pathophysiology, secondary complications and clinical manifestations of atherosclerosis similar to that which has been observed and documented in human beings.
Rabbits, as herbivores, normally ingest only small quantities of dietary cholesterol. The inability of the rabbit livers of those rabbits to clear large quantities of dietary cholesterol biochemically resulted in a rapid increase in plasma cholesterol concentration, which in turn resulted in a reporducible degree, pattern and extent of atherosclerosis to advanced stages over a defined period of time proportioal to the elevation in plasma cholesterol concentration and duration of the hypercholesterole-6~3~
As a result of the preliminary studies, an atherogenic dlet was formulated and used to induce atherosclerosis in several hundred additional rabbits which were used as subject in subsequent studies. In a typical study, 40 New Zealand albino adult male and female rabbits were all fed a basic laboratory rabbit diet (Teklad T.D. 82135) consisting of high fiber Purina Labchow 5326 fortified with 8% peanut oil by weight as the carrier for 2% crystalline cholesterol by weight. Within ten days to two weeks after initiation of 10 this oral dietary regimen, the plasma total cholesterol levels rose to above 1000 mg/dL and were maintained between 1000 and 2000 mg/d~ for the remainder of the six week atherogenic period.
At six weeks, ten rabbits were killed and autopsied in order to delineate and document the gross and microscopic severity, stage and extent of the disease in these animals as a baseline. The remaining 30 rabbits in the initial group were assigned randomly to one of three study groups. Group 1 consisted of ten animals which were continued on the atherogenic dietary regimen for an additional six weeks.
Group II consisted of ten animals which received standard laboratory rabbit (Teklad~ T.D. 82135) diet without the peanut oil and crystalline cholesterol for six weeks. Group III consisted of ten animals which were infused continuously with an antiatherosclerosis solution for six weeks via a central venous catheter positioned in the superior vena cava in a manner known to those skilled in the art. The amino acid composition of the antiatherosclerotic solution containing 9'~
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In the United States and Western Europe, cardiovascular disease and its associated maladies, dysfunctions and - complications are a principal cause of disability and the chief cause of death. One specific entity significantly contributing to this pathophysiologic process is atherosclerosis, which has been generally recognized as the leading health care problem both with respect to mortality and health care costs. During each of the past five years more than 550,000 deaths have occurred annually in the United States alone as a result of coronary artery disease.
Additionally more than 680,000 hospitalizations for myocardial infarction, the major complication of atherosclerosis, occur annually, and the number is steadily increasing. In recent years, more people in the United States have died as a result of atherosclerosis than of cancer, trauma and infectious diseases combined.
In 1983, the direct health care costs for the management of patients with coronary heart disease in the United States exceeded $8 billion. During the same period the total economic cost to this nation as a result of coronary heart disease as a manifestation of atherosclerosis alone was in excess of $60 billion and for 1987 is estimated to reach $96 billion. These costs do not even reflect the expense required for the management or treatment of the many and varied non-cardiac, atherosclerosis induced conditions.
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Atherosclerosis is a disease characterized by the deposition of fatty substances, primarily cholesterol, and subsequent fibrosis in the inner layer ~intima) of an artery, resulting in plaque deposition on the surface of, and degenerative changes in, an arterial wall. The ubi~uitous arterial fatty plaque is the earliest lesion of atherosclerosis, often found even in children, and is a grossly flat, lipid-rich atheroma consisting of both macrophages (white blood cells) and some smooth muscle fibers. The fibrous plaque representative of - 10 the various forms of advanced atherosclerosis has increased intimal smooth muscle cells surrounded by a connective and extracellular lipid. At the luminal surface of the artery, this plaque or lesion is usually covered by a dense fibrous cap of smooth muscle or connective tissue. Beneath the fibrous cap, the lesions are highly cellular consisting of macrophages, other leukocytes and smooth muscle cells. Deep in this cell-rich region may be areas of cholesterol crystals, necrotic debris and calcination.
If the disease is allowed to progress, it can cause narrowing and obstruction of the lumen o-E the artery resulting in diminished or occluded blood flow and, consequently, ischemia or infarction of the predominantly affected organ or anatomical part such as the brain heart intestine or extremities. The result can be significant loss of function, loss of cellular substance, e..,2rgency med~cal and/or surgical procedures, and significant disability or death.
Alternatively, the arterial wall can be severely weakened by the infiltration of the muscular layer with the lipid (cholesterol), inflammatory white blood cells, connective tissue and calcium, resulting in soft and/or brittle areas which can become segmentally dilated (aneurysmal) and rupture or crack leading to organ, limb or even life-threathening hemorrhage.
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While the basic definitive cause or causes of atherosclerosis are not fully known or understood, it has been hypothesized that this disorder is related to the plasma cholesterol and lipid levels based on empiric clinical observations of may investigators and medical practitioners. Consequently, one of the currently favoured regimens for treating atherosclerosis consists of medication, dietary management, behavior modification and exercise aimed at controlling and reducing the plasma cholesterol levels.
.
Common medications used to lower plasma cholesterol levels include Atromid- ~ (clofibrate), Choloxi ~ (dextrothyroxine sodium), Colestid~ (colestipol hydrochloride), Lopid~
(gemfibrozil), Lorelco (probucol), Nicolar (niacin/nicotinic -- acid) and Questra ~ (cholestyamine resin). These drugs, and the treatment in general, however are directed only at the cause and not the result of atherosclerosis and have no~ been shown to be effective in reversing the plaque deposition and degenerative changes in the arterial walls. The pharmacologic agents also have many other shortcomings such as, for example, adverse side effects (hypertension, cardiac arrhymthmias, gastrointestinal disturbances, headache, hypersensitivity, etc.), contraindications (heart, liver or kidney disease, pregnancy, etc.), requirement for lifelong conscientious administration, difficulty in maintaining 2~ consistent pa~iel.t comp iance, variakle reliability and high cost.
Once the disease has progressed tot he stage of significant persistent symptoms and compromised function, the next treatment step has conventionally been artery bypass grafting to repair and/or replace the damaged artery. While coronary artery bypass has become one of the more common major cardiovascular surgical procedures in the United States, surgery clearly is not the solution to the pathologic process since it has no arresting or reversing effect on the progress of the disease and only temporarily overcomes the most critically affected artery or arteries by bypassing them, if possible. Moreover, there is a significant risk of morbidity and mortality associated with surgery which many patients are reluctant to accept. Indeed, the disease may continue to progress even as the operation is being performed, and the autogenous veins or arteries used to bypass the disease impaired arteries undergo athersc:Lerosis changes postoperatively generally at a faster rate than the original, affected arteries. Furthermore, the conclusion reached by the Coronary-Artery Surgery Study (CASS) sponsored by the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute (NHLBI) is that there is no overall statistical benefit in the survival rate or the rate of development of myocardial infarction between the surgically and medically treated groups of patients.
As an alternative to coronary bypass surgery, it has been suggested that certain medications and procedures may be used to treat the results of atherosclerossis and not just the cause. These treatments include chelation with ethylene diamine tetraacetic acid (EDTA) and percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty (PTCA). EDTA treatments, however, are still experimental, unproven and potentially as harmful as they are beneficial. PTCA treatments are invasive, of limited application and success and occasionally manifest leinai complica~ions. Highly e~perimental intra-arterial laser beam plaque vaporization has limited application and requires an open operative approach to affected vessels.
It has now been surprisingly discovered that parenterally administered solutions comprising certain mixtures of biologically active amino acids are effective in both markedly reducing plasma cholesterol levels and arresting and reversing arterial plaque deposition and degenerative vascualar changes associatee with atherosclerosis.
_ D, -69~2 Certain amino acid solutions have been parenterally administered intravenously during the past three to four decades for a variety of medical reasons. Total Parenteral Nutrition (TPN), or intravenous hyperalimentation, is now a widely accepted technique for management of nutritional and metabolic problems in patients whose absorption and assimilation of adequate or optimal nutritional substrate cannot or should not be achieved via the alimentary tract.
Indeed, use of this technique, pioneered by the present - 10 inventor, has been successful in supporting normal growth and development in infants and in one child for more than fifteen years since birth.
Currently, a number of standard TPN solutions are commercially available in the United States, including those sold under the trade name TRAVOSOL (Travenol Laboratories), FREAMINE (McGaw Laboratories), AMINOSYN (Abbot Laboratories) and NOVAMINE (Cutter Medical, Division of Miles Laboratories). These standard intravenous feeding solutions are designed to be nutriously balanced, that is, they are formulated to provide all of the caloric, protein (amino acid), vitamin, mineral, water and trace element requirements of the average patient. The components of these solutions are also available in modular form, allowing the physician and pharmacist to formulate special solutions tailored to the specific needs OI patien~s du ng the course of their management. Essential fatty acids and additonal calories in the form of a lipid can also be administered separately intravenously as fortified emulsions of soybean or safflower oil in order to meet specific nutritional requirements. In patients with renal failure, hepatic failure or severe stress, special intravenous formulations of amino acids are also commer~ially available for infusion as an adjunct to the management of these conditions. For example, U.S. Patent No.
3,832,465 describes an amino acid solution for nutrional use -~o~g~
and U.S. Patent No. 3,950,529 describes administration of amino acids to patients having liver disease.
No suggestion has been made, however, that parenterally administered biologically active amino acid solutions might be used to treat atherosclerosis, particularly with respect to the reversal of the detrimental complications associated with the disease.
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It is, therefore, an object of the present invention to provide amino acid compositions for treating atherosclerosis whereby not only the plasma cholesterol levels (contributing cause) are lowered, but also the plaque deposition and degenerative arterial changes (results) and secondary complications associated with the disease cna be substantially arrested, reversed or even to a certain extent cured.
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~ he present invention also provides amino acid composition~
for treating atherosclerosis which do not produce the m~ny side effects of conventional dru~ treatments and can effectively decrease or even eliminate the need for major surgery or other interventional procedures in most atherosclerosis patients.
In accordance with the present invention, there are provided substrate compositions for use in treating atherosclerosis, a disease I characterized by the deposition of fatty substances in, and fibrosis o~, the inner layer of an artery resulting in plaque deposition on and degenerative changes in an arterial wall. The compositions of the present inven-tion are particularly advantageous in that they work to both sigr.ificantly lower plasma cholesterol levels and substantially arrest, reverse and, to a certain extent, even cure the arterial plaque deposition and degenerative vascular wall changes associated with atherosclerosis.
Specifically, the present invention provides for an antiathero-sclerotic agent for lowering plasma cholesterol levels and reversing arterial plaque deposition and degenerative changes associated with atherosclerosis, consisting essentially of a mixture of biologically 20 active amino acids, said mixture comprising:
From about 3~ to about 10~ isoleuc~ne From about 3% to about 10% leucine From about 2.5% to about 7.5% lysine From about 2.5~ to about 7.5~ methionine From about 3~ to about 10% phenylalanine From about 1~ to about 4% threonine From about 1~ to about 3% tryptophan From about 3~ to ~bout 10% valine From about 2~ to a~out 20~ alanine From about 7~ to about 20% arginine From about 1~ to about 4~ histidine From about 0~ to about 10~ proline From about 0~ to about 8~ serine From about 0% to about 1~ tyrosine From about 0~ to about 10~ glycine From about 0% to about 6% glutamic acid From about 0% to about 6~ aspartie acid From about 0~ to about 1% cysteine 9~6g~
by weight based upon the total weight of said biologically active amino acids in said mixture.
Additionally, the present invention provides for aqueous solutions comprising said antiatherosclerotic composition for parenteral administration.
The compositions of the present invention comprise in their overall concept, at least in part an active antiatherosclerotic agent which in turn comprises a mixture of biologically active (L-form) amino acids. This mixture more preferably comprises at least arginine and the branched chain amino acids 7 isoleucine, leucine and valine, with arginine preferably being present within the mixture in the greatest weight percentage based upon the total weight of the amino acids in the mixture. Even more - 8a -~L~9~ 2 preferably the mixture also includes lysine, methionine, phenylalanien, threonine, tryptophan and histidine. Most preferably, the mixture also includes alanine, proline, serine, typrosine, glycine, glutamic acid, aspartic acid and cysteine.
The compositions of the present invention may also comprise, in addition to the amino acid mixture, other nutrients or additives such as vitamins, minerals, electrolytes, carbohydrates, antibiotics, antic:oagulents and the like as required by the specific needs of a patient.
The compositions.of the present invention are preferably administered parenterally in the form of an aqueous solutios through a central venous catheter due to the hypertonic nature of the preferred aqueous solutions. The daily ration of the aqueous solution is further preferably administered continuously and constantly intraveneously by an intraveneous infusion pump.
The primary advantages of this invention over the other methods of managing patients with athersclerosis include the following: plasma cholesterol levels can be lowered more promptly and to a greater extent than heretofore achieved with any previous thereapeutic modality; the degree and exient of atherosclerosis plaque regression i9 greater than has ever been demonstrated previously; the duration of theraphy required to reverse the atherosclerosis plaque is relatively short compared with the duration of time over which the plaque had originally developed; all of the solution ingredients are biologically active nutrient substrates with negligible toxicity or adverse side effects when administered in g _ the proposed dosage ranges; the cost/effectiveness and cost/bene-fit ratios compare favorably with pharmacologic and surgical approaches to treating atherosclerosis; the therapy can be ini-tiated and carried out entirely on an outpatient basisi and the method addresses and attacks the basic pathophysiology of athero-sclerosis primarily and biochemically rather than pharmacologi-cally or by dealing only with complications of atherosclerosis surgically.
These and other features and advantages of the present invention will be more readily understood by those skilled in the art from a reading of the following detailed description and examples with reference to the accompanying drawing.
Fig. 1 is a graphical representation of the daily plasma total cholesterol levels of the human patient whose treatment is described in Example 2 demonstrating the responses elicited by changes in the formulation of the infusate.
As stated, the present invention provides substrate compo-sitions for treating atherosclerosis which, as also previously mentioned, is a disease characterized by the deposition of fatty substances, primarily cholesterol, as plaque and subsequent fibrosis in the inner layer (intima) of an artery.
Atherosclerosis, as set forth above, is believed to be related at least in part to plasma cholesterol and lipid levels. The 06~
compositions and methods of the present invention are particularly effective in both lowering plasma cholesterol levels (contributing cause) and also in reversing the arterial plaque deposition and degenerative changes (result) to substantially arrest, alleviate and, to a certain extent, even cure the many and varied problems, conditions and secondary complicationsd associated with the disease.
The compositions of the present invention, in their overal . concept, are comprised of biological substrates including at least, in part, an active antiatherosclerosis agent.
Antiatherosclerosis, as used herein, refers to both the lowering of plasma cholesterol levels and the arrest and reversal of arterial plaque deposition and degenerative arterial wall changes. The active antiatherosclerosis agent, in the preferred embodiment, is a mixture of biologically active amino acids, preferably L-form amino acids.
Biologically active amino acids are generally classified as either essential or nonessential. Essential amino acids are those that cannot be synthesized within the body and must be ingested in adequate amounts in the diet. Non-essential amino acids, conversely, are those that can be synthesized biochemically within the body from other substrate sources.
The amino acids most commonly classified as essential include -isoleucin~e~ leùclne, lys-ine, m2thionine, phenylalanine, threonine, tryptophan and valine. The amino acids most commonly classified as non essential include alanine, arginine, histidine, proline, serine, tyrosine, glycine, glutamic acid, aspartic acid and cysteine. Arginine and histidine have been classified as semiessential in that they appear to be essential for infants and to some extent in the presence of renal failure.
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These bioliogically active amino acids also exist in dextrorotary or D-form and levorotatory or L-form. The L-form is considerably more biologically active than the D-form and is, therefore, preferred for use as the antiatherosclerosis agent.
The substrate compositions of the present invention are placed in an aqueous solution which, in turn, is parenterally administered to a patient as the treatment. When so administered, the compositions of the present invention result in substantial lowering of plasma cholesterol levels and substantial reversal of the arterial plaque deposition on, and degenerative changes in, the arterial system.
The antiatherosclerosis agent preferably is a mixture of at least arginine, isoleucine, leucine and valine, preferably with arginine being present in the greatest weight percentage based upon the total weight of the biologically active amino acids in the mixture. These amino acids preferably comprise at least about 25% by weight of the amino acids present, but can, for brief infusion periods, be the sole active ingredients. The mixture may also include various of the other amino acids. Most preferably, all of the above-listed - amino acids are present within the mixture to provide administration of all of the amino acids along with other ingredients in a nut.ionally balan-ed )6~2 solution. All of these ingredients are a part of TPN solutions but, surprisinyly, increased levels of the branched chain amino acids an~ arginine, often coupled with the reduction of zmounts of histidine in the amino acid mixture, results in prompt (usual-ly about one week) dramatic (usually 40~ to 60%) reduction i~plasma cholesterol. Also of note is the reduction of the sim-plest amino acids, particularly alanine and glycine, most partic-ularly glycine, from TPN solutions.
The amino acids are included in the preferred amino acid mixtures in the approximate weis~ht percentage ranges based upon the total weight of the amino acids in the mixture as set forth in Ta~le I belowj.
T~3LE I
15 Amino Acid Approximate Amino Acid Approximate Weight % Weight Isoleucine 3 - 10 Alanine 2 - 20 Leucine 3 - 10 Histidine 1 - 4 Lysine 2.5 - 7.5 Proline 0 - 10 Hethionine 2.5 - 7.5 Serine 0 - 8 Phenvlalanine 3 - iO Tyrosine 0 - i Threonine 1 - 4 Glycine 0 - 10 Tryptophan 1 - 3 Glutamic Acid 0 - 6 Valine 3 - 10 Aspartic Acid 0 - 6 Ar~inine 7 - 20 Cysteine 0 - 1 Note the non-essential amino acids listed above as being optional ingredients in the broad sense of this invention may contribute less to atherosclerosis recovery than the other species. The same may hold true for alanine and the non-3~ branched chai~ essential amino acids. These amino acids, ! however, are important from a nutritional point of view when patient treatment '``` - 13 -, .
6~3;~
extends over a period of months. As such, these a~ino acids may be added in greater or lesser a~ounts than listed above without materially affectin~ or altering the ch3racteristics and advan-tages of the solution and, therefore, without departing from practicing the present invention. Thus, a more prererred amino acid ~ixture comprises of the following amino acids present in the following approximate wEight percentages b2sed upon the total weisht of the amino acids in the mixture as set forth in Table II below.
TABLE II
Amino Acid Approximate Amino Acid Approximate Weight % Weight ~
.
Isoleucine 4 - 10 Alanine 7 - 16 Leucine 5 - 10 Histidine1.5 - 3.5 lS Lysine 4.S - 6.5 Proline 4.5 - 8.
~ethionine 3.5 - 5.5 Serine 2.5 - 6.
Phenylalanine 4.5 - 7.5 Tvrosine 0 - 1 Threonine 2 - 3.5 Glycine 3 - 8 Tryptophan 1 - 2.5 Glutamic Acid 3.5 - 5.5 20 Valine 4 - 9 Aspartic Acid 2 - 4 Arginine 9 - 18 Cysteine 0 - 1 The amino acid mixtures are preferably accomplished by mixing the crystalline forms of the amino acids, usually the acetate, chloride and hydrochloride salt. A balance of the 2'~ ions used in the salts is required to avoid upsetting the acid/base balance within the body of the patient; usually about 80% acetate and 2Q% chloride and hydrochloride.
Usually the pH of the solution of the invention will range from about 5.0 to about 7.8 but preferably will be adjusted to the pH of blood, approximately 7.39, by the addition of a suitable non-toxic organic compound. The .
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crystalline form of amino acid is preferred due to i-ts high purity and the precise, reproducible formations which can be produced from such. Further, solutions made from the crystalline form can be directly assimilated into the body without preliminary biological ac:tion within the body. the mixture of amino acids can also he formulated using commercially available parenteral nutrition (TPN) solutions and adding amino acids, preferably in crystalline form, to achieve solutions of the invention. Preferred TPN solutions include those sold under the traclemark Travaso ~.
Additionally, the compositions of the present invention may include other essential nutrients such as vitamins, minerals, electrolytes, carbohydrates, antibiotics, anticoagulants and the like as required for nutritional, antibacterial and anticlotting purposes and other biological supports as will be recognized by one skilled in the art. As in substantially all biological applications, however, the most preferred compositions will be patient specific, that is, the actual amino acid mixture may be varied based upon a variety of factors which normally determine medication compositions and dosages such as, for example, the reaction of the specific patient to the composition; the tolerance of the specific patient to the individual and combined components; the stage and extent of the disease; the predominant organ(s) or system(s) adversely affected by the disease; the primary biological functions adversely affected by the disease and/or its complications; the existence, nature and extent of ~r 9~
concomitant malnutrition, the comprehensive clinical symptom complex of the patient; the stage of the recovery and from surgical or other procedure attemps at alleviating signs and symptoms of the disease and/or its complications; the age, sex and general condition of the patient; the presence of other concomitant disorders (diahetes mellitus, familial hyperlipidemia, etc.); and other factors as will be appreciated by those skilled in the art.
- These factors are all related to the ability of a patient to utilize or tolerate the amino acid mixture and other components of the compositions of the present invention. In other words, each patient may require some adjustment of specific ingredients at various stages during the treatment as a result of one or more of the above-listed factors. For example, a diabetic may not be able to tolerate as high a caloric content in the form of a sugar as a person without diabetes. As another example, it is known that the amino acid requirement of a person with renal or liver failure are different from those of a person without these conditions.
As still another example, a person suffering from malnutrition amy require greater amounts of, and different, amino acids and other nutrients than a well-nourished person.
One skilled in the art will be able to recognize these special needs and be able to adjust the compositions of the present invention accordingly.
Other adjustments to the amino acid mixture may be determined from blood and urine amino acid profiles. These profiles . ~
are indicative of how the body is utilizing a specific amino acid, and any deficiency or excess can be determined from such profiles and compensated for by altering the amino acid mixture. one skilled in the art will be able to make the desired adjustments accordingly one such an amino profile has been determined. The amino acid profile is adjusted in response to blood and urine analysis to determine the utilization of the amino acids by the body of the patient.
It has been found that the antiatherosclerotic effect is - 10 largely determined by the amount of branched chain amino acids and arginine in the treatment. The significance of arginine as an important amino acid has heretofore been overlooked but, surprisingly, in the practice of this invention has emerged as an important contributor.
The compositions of the presen invention are preferably administered parenterally in the form of an aqueous intravenous solution. The aqueous solutiion, therefore, comprises the composition as an additive solute in solution with an aqueous solvent base. The aqueous solvent base preferably comprises a sterile, ion-free water base to which may be added a variety of components depending upon the composition o~ the amino acid mixture and the specific needs of the individual patient. For example, if the composition does not have sufficient caloric value and the patient requires additional caloric intake, the aqueous solvent base may be a dextrose-water, fructose-water or invert sugar-water solution (equal parts of dextrose and fructose) including variable concentrations of the carbohydrate substrates chosen to i~4369~
meet the caloric needs of the patient. The solutions are compounded using established aseptic, antiseptic and pharmacochemical techniques well known to those skllled in the art to insure the complete solubility of the ingredients while maintaining the stabiltiy, sterility, safety and preferred formulation for the individual patients.
It is preferable that the active antiatheroscerotic agent, that is, the amino acid mixture, be present in solution in an effective amount which, when the solutiion is parenterally administered using hyperalimentation techniques well known to those skilled in the art, results in substantial lowering of plasma cholesterol and substantial reversal of arterial plaque depositiion and degenerative arterial wall changes after a relatively short period of adminisitration, usually within two to six months while at the same time providing the body of the patient nutrition necessary to sustain life. The amino acid mixture is present within the aqueous solution in concentrations ranging from as low as about 4 grams total weight of amino acids per 100 ml of solution ( a 4% by weight solution~ up to the solubility limits of the specific amino acid mixture within the particular aqueous solvent (sometimes as high as a 20% by weight in solution~. Preferably, the amino acid mixture is present within the solution in concentrations ranging from about 7.5 to about 12 grams total weight of amino acids per 100 ml of solution (a 7.5% to 12%
by weight solution). These concentrations will result in a hypertonic solution (800 to 1100 milliosmols per liter), that is, a :
~ - 18 -~ 069:2 solution having a higher osmotic pressure than blood (290 to 310 mill8iosmols per liter), the significance of which is discussed below. For the specific effective compostion described above, it is preferable that the amino acid mixture be present in solution in a concentration of from about 9 to 11, more preferably from about 10 to 11, grams of amino acids per 100 ml of solution.
The aqueous solutions of the present invention are - administered parenterally since the oral route has a number of disadvantages. When administered orally, the amino acids are subjected to the modifying digestive actions of the stomach, intestinal tract, pancreas and liver; the endogenous cycle exterts a buffering effect on the components of the formulation; the pattern of solutions to be administered is difficult to determine in order that the resultant blood levels of the active antiatherosclerosis agents be achieved identical to those induced by direct intravenous infusion;
and methods of controlling precise levels of intake are difficult to establish and maintain. By parenteral administration, a direct assault can be lauched against target tissues, and in some instances it is even possible to isolate a part of the body and perfuse it with the amino acid solution for hours, days or wèeks without drastically altering the patient's normal nutritional patterns.
Furthermore, parenteral administration permits constant, controlled administration, thus ensuring a continuity of effect without the nadirs or zeniths which G;9;~
inevitably occur following oral or enteral administration and - subsequent absorptlon and assimilation.
Since the preferred aqueous solution will be hypertonic (about 800 to about 1100 milliosmols per liter), theses solutions should be administered intravenously through a large diameter blood vessel having a high blood flow for substantially instant dilution, most preferably through a central venous catheter inserted percutaneously into the superior vena cava by any one of several acceptable methods known to those skilled in the art. A particularly preferred method of catheter insertion is described in the article by O'Donnell, Claque and Dudrick entitled "Percutaneous Insertion of a Cuffed Catheter with a Long Subcutaneous Tunnel for Intravenous Hyperalimentation," published in Southern Medical Journal, Volume 76, No. 11 (1983), pages 1344-48.
After catheterization has been achieved, continuous infusion of the aqueous antiatherosclerosis solution can begin. The total daily solution ration for the individual patient is preferably administered in an amount sufficient to provide the patient with between about 0.25 and about 3.5 grams amino acids, more preferably between about 1 and about 2 grams amino acids, per kilogram of body weight per 24-hour day.
This solution ration is also preferably administered continuously and constantly intravenously by commercially available intravenous infusion pumps to maintain a consistent amino acid level within the body.
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During the course of extended infusion theraphy, generally from about two months to about eight months, the patient preferably will not ingest any additional nutrient substrates which can affect the amino acid balance or metabolism within the body. The patient will be allowed to drink non-nutrient fluids and to ingest whatever oral medications which may be required during the course of the theraphy. In selected patients, it will be feasible to infuse the solutioin on an ambulatory or outpatient basis using portable lightweight pumps and custom made support apparatus for the solution, infusion tubing and pump. In even more highly selected patients, it may be preferable to infuse the entire daily ration of solution in 12-16 hours of the 24 hour day, allowing the patients to disconnect themselves from the pump and infusion apparatus for eight to twelve hours in order to increase their freedom and activities during the non-infusion periods. Whenever the patient is disconnected from the infusion tubing, it will be necessary to instill 1-2 ml of the solutioin containing about 100 units heparin per ml into the central catheter and cap it with a sterile cap (for example, Luer-loc ~ to prevent occulusion of the catheter with a blood clot.
During the first few weeks of infusion of the antiatherosclerosis solution, the patient should be monitored biochemically, hematoologically and metabolically every 1-3 days via blood and urine specimens. Serum and/or ~rine amino acid profiles may be be obtained from the specimens as desired and the amino acid mixtures adjusted accordingly.
When initial stability of these ~'~
3~
indices has been achieved in response to the aqueous solution infusiion and any indicated changes made in the initial composition of the solution, the intervals of monitoring can be extended to every 1-2 weeks.
Other indices to be monitored include the following: serum cholesterol, cholesterol esters, apoliopoprotein A, apolipoprotein B, high density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol, triglycerides, sodium, potassium, chloride, bicarbonate, - creatinine, calcium, inorganic phosphorus, glucose, urea nitrogen, uric acid, total protein, albumin, bilirubin, alkaline phosphatase, LDH, SGOT, SGPT, GGT, CPK, magnesium, zinc copper, blood prothrombin time, partial thromboplastin time, leukocyte count, erythrocyte count, hemoglobin, hematocrit, means corpuscular volume, means corpuscular hemoglobin, mean corpuscular hemoglobin concentration differential leukocyte count and platelet count. These standard tests are used individually, in various combinations and collectively to ensure the safety and efficacy of the treatment, to maintain homostasis and to further assist the clinician in adusting the solution specifically for the individual patient.
The foregoing detailed discussion of this inYention will be further exemplified by the following specific examples offered by way of illustration and not limitation fo the above described ~, ~9~;9~
Example 1 Attempts to implicate cholesterol as one of the primary etiologic agents in atherogenesis have been impaired somewhat by the inability to reduce and maintain lowered serum cholesterol levels by dietary and/or chemotherapeutic means alone. In a series of preliminary investigations, an animal model of atherosclerosis was developed over a period of several years by modifying the diet of New Zealand albino rabbits. Using several hundred male and female rabbits in a variety of studies while sequent:ially and logically modifying the diets, a consistent and reliable animal model was developed for inducing atherogenesis in these rabbits which simulated the distribution, various stages and severity, gross morphology and histologic characteristics, primary pathophysiology, secondary complications and clinical manifestations of atherosclerosis similar to that which has been observed and documented in human beings.
Rabbits, as herbivores, normally ingest only small quantities of dietary cholesterol. The inability of the rabbit livers of those rabbits to clear large quantities of dietary cholesterol biochemically resulted in a rapid increase in plasma cholesterol concentration, which in turn resulted in a reporducible degree, pattern and extent of atherosclerosis to advanced stages over a defined period of time proportioal to the elevation in plasma cholesterol concentration and duration of the hypercholesterole-6~3~
As a result of the preliminary studies, an atherogenic dlet was formulated and used to induce atherosclerosis in several hundred additional rabbits which were used as subject in subsequent studies. In a typical study, 40 New Zealand albino adult male and female rabbits were all fed a basic laboratory rabbit diet (Teklad T.D. 82135) consisting of high fiber Purina Labchow 5326 fortified with 8% peanut oil by weight as the carrier for 2% crystalline cholesterol by weight. Within ten days to two weeks after initiation of 10 this oral dietary regimen, the plasma total cholesterol levels rose to above 1000 mg/dL and were maintained between 1000 and 2000 mg/d~ for the remainder of the six week atherogenic period.
At six weeks, ten rabbits were killed and autopsied in order to delineate and document the gross and microscopic severity, stage and extent of the disease in these animals as a baseline. The remaining 30 rabbits in the initial group were assigned randomly to one of three study groups. Group 1 consisted of ten animals which were continued on the atherogenic dietary regimen for an additional six weeks.
Group II consisted of ten animals which received standard laboratory rabbit (Teklad~ T.D. 82135) diet without the peanut oil and crystalline cholesterol for six weeks. Group III consisted of ten animals which were infused continuously with an antiatherosclerosis solution for six weeks via a central venous catheter positioned in the superior vena cava in a manner known to those skilled in the art. The amino acid composition of the antiatherosclerotic solution containing 9'~
4.25% (by weight) amino acids and 25% (bv weight) dextrose is listed below in Table III (Column A). The solution was administered to provide 1.5 grams of amino acids and 35 calories per kilogram body weight daily with vitamins, minerals and trace elements being added to achieve a balanced nutrient mixture.
TABLE III
Amino Acid Weight % Amino Acid Weisht %
A B A B
Isoleucine 4.7 6.3 Alanine 20 15.8 Leucine 5.9 7.4 Histidine 4.1 3. 7 Lysine 5.9 6.3 Proline - ~.4 8.4 ~ethionine 5.9 5.3 Serine 7 0 6.3 Phenylalanine 5.9 6.3 Tyrosine 0.5 o.~
Threonine 3.5 3.2 Glycine 9.4 6.3 Tryptophan 2.4 2.1 Glutamic Acid - 3.2 Valine 4.7 6.3 Aspartic Acid - 2.1 Arginine 10.0 10.5 Cysteine 0.7 0.6 At the end of the second six week study period, all rabbits were Xilled and autopsied to determine and delineate the severity, stage and distribution of atherosclerosis. In the Group I rabbits, complicated atherosclerosis lesions were induced which reproducibly and consistently involved approximately 85% to 95% of the aorta from its origin at the heart to the bifurcation of the common iliac arteries, with the pattern of superficial plaque and arterial wall distributiion characteristic of atherosclerosis lesions observed in human beings. Several of the rabbits in Group I
showed evidence of having sustained human-liXe myocardial infarctions, cerebral infarcations, intestinal ischemia and infarction, and ischemia and infarction in the hind ./`' extremities.
~ - 25 -The rabbits in Group II which were fed the standard laboratory rabbit diet for the six weeks did not exhibit any regression of the atherosclerosis plaque when compared with the initial group of ten rabbits killed after six weeks on the atherogenic diet. Instead, there was slight progression of the atherosclerosis in Group II during this second six week period.
In the &roup III rabbits receiving the special atherosclerosis intravenous formulation, however, dramatic regressions occurred in the atherosclerosis plaques. In fact, the aorta was about 90% free of any evidence of atherosclerosis.~ In response to plasma and urine amino acid concentrations measured at weekly intervals in the Group III
rabbits, the daily intravenous amino acid ration was increased from 1.5 to 1.7 grams per kilogram body weight, and glutaminc acid and aspartic acid were added to the formulation. The final amino acid composition for Group III
rabbits is shown in Column B, Table III. Note that the greatest increases occurred in the branched chain amino acids in the composition while arginine was increased slightly.
Thse experiments were repeated until a total of 200 rabbits were studied in each of the thres groups with results consistent with those above.
This investigation demonstrates consistent atherosclerosis plaque regression as a result of intravenGus amino acid management alone. These studies formed the basis and justification ~or progressing to subsequent investigations in human patients.
69~
Chronologically, the studies at this point were begun in human patients using the antiatherosclerosis solution of the same composition which was infuseed into the last set of forty rabbits.
Example 2 A forty year old man with severe generalized atherosclerosis secondary to familial Type II hyperlipidemia previously treated at a lipid research clinic with a combination of low cholesterol/fat, low calorie (1400 calories) diet and cholestyramine was considered for treatment using the solutioins of this invention. Even after five months of this prior treatment, the patient's plasma cholesterol level could only be reduced from a baseline of 496 mg/dL to 409 mg/dL
(top normal plasma cholesterol level is 260 mg/dL) and the patient did not experience any relief of his symptoms detailed below. Within two weeks of voluntary cessation of this prior regimen, the plasma cholesterol returned to levels between 490 to 536 mg/dL.
The patient had recovered from a myocardial infarction one year earlier, but continued to have angina pectoris, could walk only one block without severe leg cramps and claudication, and had frequent fainting spells and numbness in his extremities related to poor blood flow in his major arteries. Four of the eight distal extremity pulses commonly palpated in the arms and legs were absent, and the remainder were diminished in strength by about 50%. Coronary angiography demonstrated complete occlusion of his right main coronary artery with diffuse narrowing and ~ ~, ":
~ 27 -..
'- . ' --~ .
impaired blood flow in his left anterior descending and circumflex coronary arteries secondary to atherosclerosis.
There was no evidence of significant collateral myocardial circulation, and because of the generalized diffuse extent of his disease, he was not a potential candidate for coronary artery bypass surgery.
His prognosis for life was less than two years. His plasma cholesterol concentration was 540 mg/dL, he was barely ambulatory and fainting spells had increased in frequency and severity so that he had fallen and injured himself on several occasions. Magnetic resnance imaging of his abdominal aorta, iliac arteries and carotid arteries confirmed up to 80%
occulsion of the lumens of these vessels by atherosclerosis plaques. Dopplar ultrasound studies of both lower extremities showed markedly diminished arterial blood flow bilaterally.
A percutaneous central venous catheter was inserted into the superior vena cava via the right subclavian vein and initially an intravenous solution having the amino acid composition as set forth in Column B, Table III, above, was in~used continuously. The patient initally received 1.35 grams of amino acids as this formulation. Simultaneously he received 35 calories per kilogram body weight as dextrose together with his daily requirements of vitamins, minerals and trace elements using standard intravenous additives.
Baseline metabolic studies were obtained serially throughout the six month treatment and cllnical study . , -- ,.
9~
period. The patient was asked not to ingest any foodstuffs other than water throughout the study.
During the course of antiatheroclerosis infusion theraphy and study in tha patient, the initial solution formulation was modified on several occasions in response to the plasma cholesterol levels as illustrated in Fig. 1.
As can be seen in Fig. 1, the plasma cholesterol concentration dropped from the initial 508 mg/dL to 450 mg/dL
within two days. At point 1, the total daily calories were reduced in the mixture from 2500 (35 cal/kg) to 2100 (30 cal/kg) because the relative inactivity of the patient did not merit the originally calculated caloric requirements. By the eight day of therapy, the plasma cholesterol level had dropped further to 370 mg/dL, but rose to 393 mg/dL on the ninth day. At point 2, the daily dosages of the branched chain amino acids -- leucine, isoleucine and valine -- were increased by two grams. At this point, the following amino acids were present in the following approximate weight percentages based upon the total weight of the amino acids in the mixture: isoleucine, 7.9%; leucine, 8.9% lysine, 5.9%;
methionine, 5.0%, phenylalanine, 5.9%; threonine, 3.0%;
tryptophane, 2.0%; valine, 7.9% alanine, 14.9%; arginine, 9.9%; histidine, 3.0%; poline, 7.9%; serine, 5.9%; tyrosine, 0.4%; glycine, 5.9%; glutamic acid, 3.0%; aspartic acid, 2.0%; and cysteine, 0.6%. The amino acid dosage was increased from 1.35 to 1.45 grams per kilogram body weight per day for a daily total ration of 101.5 grams of amino acids as this formulation.
;!
~ 29 -`~3-., ~ ~ ... . . . .
3~
Within ten days of starting the theraphy, the plasma cholesterol level had dropped dramatically to 220 mg/dL, representing a 57% reduction from the starting level of 508 mg/dL. At points 3, 4 and 5, minor changes in concentrations of various amino acid components and dextrose calories were made in response to biochemical determinations made on serum and urine specimens. More specifically, at point three the phenylalanine was increased by one gram and the glycine dose was decreased by one gram in the daily amino acid ration. At point four, the daily dextrose ration was increased to provide 35 cal/kg because the patient had increased his activity and begun to lose weight. At point five, the alanine dose was-decreased by three grams while the glutamic acid and aspartic acid dosages were each increased by 1.5 grams in the daily amino acid ration.
At point 6, a dramatic rise in the plasma cholesterol level from 260 to 370 mg/dL occurred following the intravenous infusion of a single 500 ml dose of 10% soybean oil emulsion (sold under the trademark Intralipi ~ . Points 7 and 8 represent reductions in total calories administered as dextrose to 34 cal/kg and 33 cal/kg, repectively, the plasma cholesterol level remained significantly elevated above its pre-fat infusion nadir for at least four weeks after the infusion of the fat emulsion. By the time it had dropped back to 300 mg/dL, and at point 9, a single 500 ml dose of 20~ soybean oil emulsion was given intravenously (Intralipi ~ with a rise in the serum plasma cholesterol level to 345 mg/dL, confirming the deleterious effect on the plasma , . . .
~ - 30 -cholesterol level of infusing even essential fatty acids as soybeam oil emulsions. At point 10 the daily dextrose calories were reduced to 30 cal/kg, and the daily dosages of proline and serine were each decreased by two grams. secause the patient noted a loss of energy and weight, the flucose ration was restored to 35 cal/kg at point 11. At point 12, the arginine concentration was nearly doubled in the solution while the histidine was decreased. A significant drop in plasma cholesterol occurred from 306 mg/dL to 245 mg/dL. The amino acid mixture composition at this point is set forth in Table IV below. The amino acid dosage at this point was increased from 1.45 to 1.5 grams per kilogram body weight per day for a daily total ration of 1.3.5 grams of amino acids.
TA~LE IV
Amino Acid Weight % Mol ~ Amino Acid Weight ~ ~.ol Isoleucine 7.7 7.8 Alanine 11.6 17.0 Leucine 8.7 8.6 Histidine 2.4 1.5 Lysine 5.8 4.2 Proline 5.8 6.6 Methionine 4.8 4.3 Serine 3.9 4.8 Phenylalanine 6.8 5.3 Tyrosine 0.4 0.3 Threonine 2.9 3.2 Glycine 4.8 B.~
Tryptophan 1.9 1.3 Glutamic Acid 4.4 3.9 ~aline 7.7 8.6 Aspartic Acid 3.4 3.3 Arginine 16.4 10.2 Cysteine 0.6 0.6 During the next week, coronary angiography, magnetic resonance imaging of his aorta, carotid arteries and iliac arteries and doppler ultrasound studies of both lower extremities were repeated. The treatment/study period was then terminated and the ~a4D6~3~
patient resumed oral feeding with a restriction of dietary cholesterol to 100 mg daily.
During the six monts of treatment, the patient had no angina pectoris or fainting spells; three of the previously four absent extremity pulses could now be palpated; the four previously palpable extremity pulses increased in strength by 50 to 100%; the blood flow to his legs steadily increased up to 250-300% as demonstrated by resting dopplar ultrasound . studies, and he was able to walk up to 3-4 miles per day at four miles per hour without cramping or claudication in his legs.
At the end of the six month treatment period, magnetic - resonance imaging demonstrated up to a 40-50% decrease in atherosclerosis plaque in the abdominal aorta, common iliac arteries and carotid arteries. Repeat coronary angiography demonstrated widely patent left anterior descending and circumflex coronary arteries, with multiple collateral artieries to the right coronary artery also widely patent except at the point of previous complete occulsion at its origin.
In addition to these dramatic demonstations of athrosclerosis plaque regression and increased arterial blood flow through multiple previously compromised arteries, rurtner evidence or improved bodily functions was manifested by the patients's ability to play 18 holes of golf while scoring in the 70's, and to gain employment as a carpenter with a housing construction firm. He has remained asymptomatic and active physically for more than 15 months since his theraphy was initiated. Continued periodic . ~
~ - 32 -, ,,~, observation and study occurred to document successful achievement of regression of atherosclerosis and improvement of arterial blood flow and bodily functions, as clearly demonstrated in this patient, are unprecdented with any form of medical or dietary management.
The final solution formulation which evolved during the course of the six month study period in this patient was subsequently infused into an additional ten rabbits as part . of a supplementary group of forty rabbits studied in an otherwise identical manner as described above. The regression of atherosclerosis decumented in th~s ~upplementary group of 10 rabbits was the most effective, consistent and complete of any of the animals studied and - ranged from 98% to 99% disappearance of atherosclerotic disease.
Example 3 Additional corroborative evidence of the effectiveness of the method and composition for treating atherosclerosis was obtained in 30 volunteer human subjects who had beén receiving total parenteral nutrition via central venous feeding catheters for two months to eight years. Reductions of plasma cholesterol levels by 40-60% below their usual cnolesteroi ievels regardless of the magnitude of ~he absolute values were achieved in all of the subjects within one week of changing the aqueous solution infusate to the amino acid compositions as set forth in either Table III or Table IV. These findings are highly significant not only because of the order of magnitude of the reductlos in plasma cholesterol levels documented in these subjects, but also because the positive response rate was 100%. All of these patients had been recieving long-term intravenous infusions of conventional TPN substrates containing mixtures of amino acids, without any significant reduction in plasma cholesterol levels. The infusate composition of Table IV
caused dramatic reduction.
A striking example of the effectiveness of the solution described in Table IV in reducing plasma cholesterol levels in one patient occurred with the reduction of an already low baseline plasma cholesterol concentration of 83 mg/dL to 50 mg/dL within one week, representing a 40% reduction utilizing an aqueous solution having an amino acid composition as set forth in Table IV.
These data suggest that the mechanism of action of this invention is probably an active biochemical process rather than a result of severe restriction of dietary cholesterol, cholesterol precursors and other lipids, and demonstrate the effectiveness of the present invention.
The composition and methods of the present invnetion, as previously described and as illustrated in the examples, provide a unique, potent and effective modality for the treatment of atherosclerosis. The recently completed National Institute of Health sponsored Lipid Research Clinic-Coronary Primary Prevention Trial was the first study in human beings to establish conclusively that lowering blood cholesterol levels reduces heart attacks and heart attack deaths. However, despite intensive dietary control and administration of pharmacologic plasma cho-lesterol reducing agents, the average plasma cholesterol level during the ten year study period was reduced by only 8.6% with no higher than a 19~ reduction in the best responding patients.
However, the incidence of myocardial infarctions in this study group was reduced by up to 19% when compared with the general population. The incidence of myocardial infarctions can be even more significantly reduced in association with the 40-60~ reduc-tions in plasma cholesterol levels which have been demonstrated with the use of this invention.
It should be noted that many modifications and variations besides the embodiments specifically ment~oned may be made in the aforedescribed compositions and methods without - departing sub-stantially from the concept of the present invention. Accord-ingly, it should be clearly understood that the form of the invention described and illustrated herein is exemplary only and ic not intended as a limitation upon the scope thereof.
~3 .5'--i . .:'
TABLE III
Amino Acid Weight % Amino Acid Weisht %
A B A B
Isoleucine 4.7 6.3 Alanine 20 15.8 Leucine 5.9 7.4 Histidine 4.1 3. 7 Lysine 5.9 6.3 Proline - ~.4 8.4 ~ethionine 5.9 5.3 Serine 7 0 6.3 Phenylalanine 5.9 6.3 Tyrosine 0.5 o.~
Threonine 3.5 3.2 Glycine 9.4 6.3 Tryptophan 2.4 2.1 Glutamic Acid - 3.2 Valine 4.7 6.3 Aspartic Acid - 2.1 Arginine 10.0 10.5 Cysteine 0.7 0.6 At the end of the second six week study period, all rabbits were Xilled and autopsied to determine and delineate the severity, stage and distribution of atherosclerosis. In the Group I rabbits, complicated atherosclerosis lesions were induced which reproducibly and consistently involved approximately 85% to 95% of the aorta from its origin at the heart to the bifurcation of the common iliac arteries, with the pattern of superficial plaque and arterial wall distributiion characteristic of atherosclerosis lesions observed in human beings. Several of the rabbits in Group I
showed evidence of having sustained human-liXe myocardial infarctions, cerebral infarcations, intestinal ischemia and infarction, and ischemia and infarction in the hind ./`' extremities.
~ - 25 -The rabbits in Group II which were fed the standard laboratory rabbit diet for the six weeks did not exhibit any regression of the atherosclerosis plaque when compared with the initial group of ten rabbits killed after six weeks on the atherogenic diet. Instead, there was slight progression of the atherosclerosis in Group II during this second six week period.
In the &roup III rabbits receiving the special atherosclerosis intravenous formulation, however, dramatic regressions occurred in the atherosclerosis plaques. In fact, the aorta was about 90% free of any evidence of atherosclerosis.~ In response to plasma and urine amino acid concentrations measured at weekly intervals in the Group III
rabbits, the daily intravenous amino acid ration was increased from 1.5 to 1.7 grams per kilogram body weight, and glutaminc acid and aspartic acid were added to the formulation. The final amino acid composition for Group III
rabbits is shown in Column B, Table III. Note that the greatest increases occurred in the branched chain amino acids in the composition while arginine was increased slightly.
Thse experiments were repeated until a total of 200 rabbits were studied in each of the thres groups with results consistent with those above.
This investigation demonstrates consistent atherosclerosis plaque regression as a result of intravenGus amino acid management alone. These studies formed the basis and justification ~or progressing to subsequent investigations in human patients.
69~
Chronologically, the studies at this point were begun in human patients using the antiatherosclerosis solution of the same composition which was infuseed into the last set of forty rabbits.
Example 2 A forty year old man with severe generalized atherosclerosis secondary to familial Type II hyperlipidemia previously treated at a lipid research clinic with a combination of low cholesterol/fat, low calorie (1400 calories) diet and cholestyramine was considered for treatment using the solutioins of this invention. Even after five months of this prior treatment, the patient's plasma cholesterol level could only be reduced from a baseline of 496 mg/dL to 409 mg/dL
(top normal plasma cholesterol level is 260 mg/dL) and the patient did not experience any relief of his symptoms detailed below. Within two weeks of voluntary cessation of this prior regimen, the plasma cholesterol returned to levels between 490 to 536 mg/dL.
The patient had recovered from a myocardial infarction one year earlier, but continued to have angina pectoris, could walk only one block without severe leg cramps and claudication, and had frequent fainting spells and numbness in his extremities related to poor blood flow in his major arteries. Four of the eight distal extremity pulses commonly palpated in the arms and legs were absent, and the remainder were diminished in strength by about 50%. Coronary angiography demonstrated complete occlusion of his right main coronary artery with diffuse narrowing and ~ ~, ":
~ 27 -..
'- . ' --~ .
impaired blood flow in his left anterior descending and circumflex coronary arteries secondary to atherosclerosis.
There was no evidence of significant collateral myocardial circulation, and because of the generalized diffuse extent of his disease, he was not a potential candidate for coronary artery bypass surgery.
His prognosis for life was less than two years. His plasma cholesterol concentration was 540 mg/dL, he was barely ambulatory and fainting spells had increased in frequency and severity so that he had fallen and injured himself on several occasions. Magnetic resnance imaging of his abdominal aorta, iliac arteries and carotid arteries confirmed up to 80%
occulsion of the lumens of these vessels by atherosclerosis plaques. Dopplar ultrasound studies of both lower extremities showed markedly diminished arterial blood flow bilaterally.
A percutaneous central venous catheter was inserted into the superior vena cava via the right subclavian vein and initially an intravenous solution having the amino acid composition as set forth in Column B, Table III, above, was in~used continuously. The patient initally received 1.35 grams of amino acids as this formulation. Simultaneously he received 35 calories per kilogram body weight as dextrose together with his daily requirements of vitamins, minerals and trace elements using standard intravenous additives.
Baseline metabolic studies were obtained serially throughout the six month treatment and cllnical study . , -- ,.
9~
period. The patient was asked not to ingest any foodstuffs other than water throughout the study.
During the course of antiatheroclerosis infusion theraphy and study in tha patient, the initial solution formulation was modified on several occasions in response to the plasma cholesterol levels as illustrated in Fig. 1.
As can be seen in Fig. 1, the plasma cholesterol concentration dropped from the initial 508 mg/dL to 450 mg/dL
within two days. At point 1, the total daily calories were reduced in the mixture from 2500 (35 cal/kg) to 2100 (30 cal/kg) because the relative inactivity of the patient did not merit the originally calculated caloric requirements. By the eight day of therapy, the plasma cholesterol level had dropped further to 370 mg/dL, but rose to 393 mg/dL on the ninth day. At point 2, the daily dosages of the branched chain amino acids -- leucine, isoleucine and valine -- were increased by two grams. At this point, the following amino acids were present in the following approximate weight percentages based upon the total weight of the amino acids in the mixture: isoleucine, 7.9%; leucine, 8.9% lysine, 5.9%;
methionine, 5.0%, phenylalanine, 5.9%; threonine, 3.0%;
tryptophane, 2.0%; valine, 7.9% alanine, 14.9%; arginine, 9.9%; histidine, 3.0%; poline, 7.9%; serine, 5.9%; tyrosine, 0.4%; glycine, 5.9%; glutamic acid, 3.0%; aspartic acid, 2.0%; and cysteine, 0.6%. The amino acid dosage was increased from 1.35 to 1.45 grams per kilogram body weight per day for a daily total ration of 101.5 grams of amino acids as this formulation.
;!
~ 29 -`~3-., ~ ~ ... . . . .
3~
Within ten days of starting the theraphy, the plasma cholesterol level had dropped dramatically to 220 mg/dL, representing a 57% reduction from the starting level of 508 mg/dL. At points 3, 4 and 5, minor changes in concentrations of various amino acid components and dextrose calories were made in response to biochemical determinations made on serum and urine specimens. More specifically, at point three the phenylalanine was increased by one gram and the glycine dose was decreased by one gram in the daily amino acid ration. At point four, the daily dextrose ration was increased to provide 35 cal/kg because the patient had increased his activity and begun to lose weight. At point five, the alanine dose was-decreased by three grams while the glutamic acid and aspartic acid dosages were each increased by 1.5 grams in the daily amino acid ration.
At point 6, a dramatic rise in the plasma cholesterol level from 260 to 370 mg/dL occurred following the intravenous infusion of a single 500 ml dose of 10% soybean oil emulsion (sold under the trademark Intralipi ~ . Points 7 and 8 represent reductions in total calories administered as dextrose to 34 cal/kg and 33 cal/kg, repectively, the plasma cholesterol level remained significantly elevated above its pre-fat infusion nadir for at least four weeks after the infusion of the fat emulsion. By the time it had dropped back to 300 mg/dL, and at point 9, a single 500 ml dose of 20~ soybean oil emulsion was given intravenously (Intralipi ~ with a rise in the serum plasma cholesterol level to 345 mg/dL, confirming the deleterious effect on the plasma , . . .
~ - 30 -cholesterol level of infusing even essential fatty acids as soybeam oil emulsions. At point 10 the daily dextrose calories were reduced to 30 cal/kg, and the daily dosages of proline and serine were each decreased by two grams. secause the patient noted a loss of energy and weight, the flucose ration was restored to 35 cal/kg at point 11. At point 12, the arginine concentration was nearly doubled in the solution while the histidine was decreased. A significant drop in plasma cholesterol occurred from 306 mg/dL to 245 mg/dL. The amino acid mixture composition at this point is set forth in Table IV below. The amino acid dosage at this point was increased from 1.45 to 1.5 grams per kilogram body weight per day for a daily total ration of 1.3.5 grams of amino acids.
TA~LE IV
Amino Acid Weight % Mol ~ Amino Acid Weight ~ ~.ol Isoleucine 7.7 7.8 Alanine 11.6 17.0 Leucine 8.7 8.6 Histidine 2.4 1.5 Lysine 5.8 4.2 Proline 5.8 6.6 Methionine 4.8 4.3 Serine 3.9 4.8 Phenylalanine 6.8 5.3 Tyrosine 0.4 0.3 Threonine 2.9 3.2 Glycine 4.8 B.~
Tryptophan 1.9 1.3 Glutamic Acid 4.4 3.9 ~aline 7.7 8.6 Aspartic Acid 3.4 3.3 Arginine 16.4 10.2 Cysteine 0.6 0.6 During the next week, coronary angiography, magnetic resonance imaging of his aorta, carotid arteries and iliac arteries and doppler ultrasound studies of both lower extremities were repeated. The treatment/study period was then terminated and the ~a4D6~3~
patient resumed oral feeding with a restriction of dietary cholesterol to 100 mg daily.
During the six monts of treatment, the patient had no angina pectoris or fainting spells; three of the previously four absent extremity pulses could now be palpated; the four previously palpable extremity pulses increased in strength by 50 to 100%; the blood flow to his legs steadily increased up to 250-300% as demonstrated by resting dopplar ultrasound . studies, and he was able to walk up to 3-4 miles per day at four miles per hour without cramping or claudication in his legs.
At the end of the six month treatment period, magnetic - resonance imaging demonstrated up to a 40-50% decrease in atherosclerosis plaque in the abdominal aorta, common iliac arteries and carotid arteries. Repeat coronary angiography demonstrated widely patent left anterior descending and circumflex coronary arteries, with multiple collateral artieries to the right coronary artery also widely patent except at the point of previous complete occulsion at its origin.
In addition to these dramatic demonstations of athrosclerosis plaque regression and increased arterial blood flow through multiple previously compromised arteries, rurtner evidence or improved bodily functions was manifested by the patients's ability to play 18 holes of golf while scoring in the 70's, and to gain employment as a carpenter with a housing construction firm. He has remained asymptomatic and active physically for more than 15 months since his theraphy was initiated. Continued periodic . ~
~ - 32 -, ,,~, observation and study occurred to document successful achievement of regression of atherosclerosis and improvement of arterial blood flow and bodily functions, as clearly demonstrated in this patient, are unprecdented with any form of medical or dietary management.
The final solution formulation which evolved during the course of the six month study period in this patient was subsequently infused into an additional ten rabbits as part . of a supplementary group of forty rabbits studied in an otherwise identical manner as described above. The regression of atherosclerosis decumented in th~s ~upplementary group of 10 rabbits was the most effective, consistent and complete of any of the animals studied and - ranged from 98% to 99% disappearance of atherosclerotic disease.
Example 3 Additional corroborative evidence of the effectiveness of the method and composition for treating atherosclerosis was obtained in 30 volunteer human subjects who had beén receiving total parenteral nutrition via central venous feeding catheters for two months to eight years. Reductions of plasma cholesterol levels by 40-60% below their usual cnolesteroi ievels regardless of the magnitude of ~he absolute values were achieved in all of the subjects within one week of changing the aqueous solution infusate to the amino acid compositions as set forth in either Table III or Table IV. These findings are highly significant not only because of the order of magnitude of the reductlos in plasma cholesterol levels documented in these subjects, but also because the positive response rate was 100%. All of these patients had been recieving long-term intravenous infusions of conventional TPN substrates containing mixtures of amino acids, without any significant reduction in plasma cholesterol levels. The infusate composition of Table IV
caused dramatic reduction.
A striking example of the effectiveness of the solution described in Table IV in reducing plasma cholesterol levels in one patient occurred with the reduction of an already low baseline plasma cholesterol concentration of 83 mg/dL to 50 mg/dL within one week, representing a 40% reduction utilizing an aqueous solution having an amino acid composition as set forth in Table IV.
These data suggest that the mechanism of action of this invention is probably an active biochemical process rather than a result of severe restriction of dietary cholesterol, cholesterol precursors and other lipids, and demonstrate the effectiveness of the present invention.
The composition and methods of the present invnetion, as previously described and as illustrated in the examples, provide a unique, potent and effective modality for the treatment of atherosclerosis. The recently completed National Institute of Health sponsored Lipid Research Clinic-Coronary Primary Prevention Trial was the first study in human beings to establish conclusively that lowering blood cholesterol levels reduces heart attacks and heart attack deaths. However, despite intensive dietary control and administration of pharmacologic plasma cho-lesterol reducing agents, the average plasma cholesterol level during the ten year study period was reduced by only 8.6% with no higher than a 19~ reduction in the best responding patients.
However, the incidence of myocardial infarctions in this study group was reduced by up to 19% when compared with the general population. The incidence of myocardial infarctions can be even more significantly reduced in association with the 40-60~ reduc-tions in plasma cholesterol levels which have been demonstrated with the use of this invention.
It should be noted that many modifications and variations besides the embodiments specifically ment~oned may be made in the aforedescribed compositions and methods without - departing sub-stantially from the concept of the present invention. Accord-ingly, it should be clearly understood that the form of the invention described and illustrated herein is exemplary only and ic not intended as a limitation upon the scope thereof.
~3 .5'--i . .:'
Claims (24)
1. An antiatherosclerotic agent for lowering plasma cho-lesterol levels and reversing arterial plaque deposition and degenerative changes associated with atherosclerosis, consisting essentially of a mixture of biologically active amino acids, said mixture comprising:
From about 3% to about 10% isoleucine From about 3% to about 10% leucine From about 2.5% to about 7.5% lysine From about 2.5% to about 7.5% methionine From about 3% to about 10% phenylalanine From about 1% to about 4% threonine From about 1% to about 3% tryptophan From about 3% to about 10% valine From about 2% to about 20% alanine From about 7% to about 20% arginine From about 1% to about 4% histidine From about 0% to about 10% proline From about 0% to about 8% serine From about 0% to about 1% tyrosine From about 0% to about 10% glycine From about 0% to about 6% glutamic acid From about 0% to about 6% aspartic acid From about 0% to about 1% cysteine by weight based upon the total weight of said biologically active amino acids in said mixture.
From about 3% to about 10% isoleucine From about 3% to about 10% leucine From about 2.5% to about 7.5% lysine From about 2.5% to about 7.5% methionine From about 3% to about 10% phenylalanine From about 1% to about 4% threonine From about 1% to about 3% tryptophan From about 3% to about 10% valine From about 2% to about 20% alanine From about 7% to about 20% arginine From about 1% to about 4% histidine From about 0% to about 10% proline From about 0% to about 8% serine From about 0% to about 1% tyrosine From about 0% to about 10% glycine From about 0% to about 6% glutamic acid From about 0% to about 6% aspartic acid From about 0% to about 1% cysteine by weight based upon the total weight of said biologically active amino acids in said mixture.
2. The antiatherosclerotic agent of claim 1, wherein said mixture comprises:
From about 4% to about 10% isoleucine From about 5% to about 10% leucine From about 4.5% to about 6.5% lysine From about 3.5% to about 5.5% methionine From about 4.5% to about 7.5% phenylalanine From about 2% to about 3.5% threonine From about 1% to about 2.5% tryptophan From about 4% to about 9% valine From about 7% to about 16% alanine From about 9% to about 18% arginine From about 1.5% to about 3.5% histidine From about 4.5% to about 8.5% proline From about 2.5% to about 6.5% serine From about 0% to about 1% tyrosine From about 3% to about 8% glycine From about 3.5% to about 5.5% glutamic acid From about 2% to about 4% aspartic acid From about 0% to about 1% cysteine by weight based upon the total weight of said biologically active amino acids in said mixture.
From about 4% to about 10% isoleucine From about 5% to about 10% leucine From about 4.5% to about 6.5% lysine From about 3.5% to about 5.5% methionine From about 4.5% to about 7.5% phenylalanine From about 2% to about 3.5% threonine From about 1% to about 2.5% tryptophan From about 4% to about 9% valine From about 7% to about 16% alanine From about 9% to about 18% arginine From about 1.5% to about 3.5% histidine From about 4.5% to about 8.5% proline From about 2.5% to about 6.5% serine From about 0% to about 1% tyrosine From about 3% to about 8% glycine From about 3.5% to about 5.5% glutamic acid From about 2% to about 4% aspartic acid From about 0% to about 1% cysteine by weight based upon the total weight of said biologically active amino acids in said mixture.
3. The antiatherosclerotic agent of claim 1, wherein arginine is present within said mixture in the greatest weight per-centage based upon the total weight of said biologically active amino acids in said mixture.
4. The antiatherosclerotic agent of claim 1, 2 or 3, wherein said biologically active amino acids comprise their levorotatory form.
5. The antiatherosclerotic agent of claim 1, 2 or 3, wherein said biologically active amino acids comprise their crystalline form.
6. A composition useful in the treatment of atherosclerosis comprising an active antiatherosclerotic agent consisting essen-tially of a mixture of biologically active amino acids including at least isoleucine, leucine, valine and arginine present within said composition in an effective amount whereby parenteral administration of said composition in the form of an aqueous solution for an effec-tive period of time results in the substantial lowering of plasma cholesterol and the substantial reversal of arterial plaque deposition and degenerative changes associated with atherosclerosis and whereby arginine is present within said mixture in the greatest weight per-centage based upon the total weight of said biologically active amino acids in said mixture.
7. The composition of claim 6, wherein said mixture further comprises lysine, methionine, phenylalanine, threonine, tryptophan and histidine.
8. The composition of claim 6 or 7, wherein said mixture further comprises alanine, proline, serine, tyrosine, glycine, glutamic acid, aspartic acid and cysteine.
9. The composition of claim 6 or 7, wherein said biologically active amino acids comprise their levorotatory form.
10. The composition of claim h or 7, wherein said biologically active amino acids comprise their crystalline form.
11. The composition of Claim 6 or 7, wherein said mixture comprises the following mixture of amino acids:
From about 3.5% to about 10% isoleucine From about 3% to about 10% leucine From about 2.5% to about 7.5% lysine From about 2.5% to about 7.5% methionine From about 3% to about 10% phenylalanine From about 1% to about 4% threonine From about 1% to about 3% tryptophan From about 3% to about 10% valine From about 2% to about 20% alanine From about 7% to about 20% arginine From about 1% to about 4% histidine From about 0% to about 10% proline From about 0% to about 8% serine From about 0% to about 1% tyrosine From about 0% to about 10% glycine From about 0% to about 6% glutamic acid From about 0% to about 6% aspartic acid From about 0% to about 1% cysteine by weight based upon the total weight of said biologically active amino acids in said mixture.
From about 3.5% to about 10% isoleucine From about 3% to about 10% leucine From about 2.5% to about 7.5% lysine From about 2.5% to about 7.5% methionine From about 3% to about 10% phenylalanine From about 1% to about 4% threonine From about 1% to about 3% tryptophan From about 3% to about 10% valine From about 2% to about 20% alanine From about 7% to about 20% arginine From about 1% to about 4% histidine From about 0% to about 10% proline From about 0% to about 8% serine From about 0% to about 1% tyrosine From about 0% to about 10% glycine From about 0% to about 6% glutamic acid From about 0% to about 6% aspartic acid From about 0% to about 1% cysteine by weight based upon the total weight of said biologically active amino acids in said mixture.
12. The composition of claim 11, wherein said mixture comprises:
From about 4% to about 10% isoleucine From about 5% to about 10% leucine From about 4.5% to about 6.5% lysine From about 3.5% to about 5.5% methionine From about 4.5% to about 7.5% phenylalanine From about 2% to about 3.5% threonine From about 1% to about 2.5% tryptophan From about 4% to about 9% valine From about 7% to about 16% alanine From about 9% to about 18% arginine From about 1.5% to about 3.5% histidine From about 4.5% to about 8.5% proline From about 2.5% to about 6.5% serine From about 0% to about 1% tyrosine From about 3% to about 8% glycine From about 3.5% to about 5.5% glutamic acid From about 2% to about 4% aspartic acid From about 0% to about 1% cysteine by weight based upon the total weight of said biologically active amino acids within said mixture.
From about 4% to about 10% isoleucine From about 5% to about 10% leucine From about 4.5% to about 6.5% lysine From about 3.5% to about 5.5% methionine From about 4.5% to about 7.5% phenylalanine From about 2% to about 3.5% threonine From about 1% to about 2.5% tryptophan From about 4% to about 9% valine From about 7% to about 16% alanine From about 9% to about 18% arginine From about 1.5% to about 3.5% histidine From about 4.5% to about 8.5% proline From about 2.5% to about 6.5% serine From about 0% to about 1% tyrosine From about 3% to about 8% glycine From about 3.5% to about 5.5% glutamic acid From about 2% to about 4% aspartic acid From about 0% to about 1% cysteine by weight based upon the total weight of said biologically active amino acids within said mixture.
13. The composition of claim 12, further comprising a nutrient supplement.
14. An aqueous solution for use in the treatment of athero-sclerosis, a disease characterized by the deposition of fatty substances in and fibrosis of the inner layer of an artery resulting in plaque deposition on and degenerative changes in an arterial wall, comprising:
an aqueous base; and an additive solute comprising an active antiatherosclerotic agent consisting essentially of a mixture of biologically active amino acids comprising isoleucine, leucine, valine and arginine, said additive solute being present within said solution in an effective amount whereby parenteral administration of said solution for an effective period of time results in the subustantial lowering or plasma cholesterol and the substantial reversal of arterial plaque deposition and degenerative changes associated with atherosclerosis.
an aqueous base; and an additive solute comprising an active antiatherosclerotic agent consisting essentially of a mixture of biologically active amino acids comprising isoleucine, leucine, valine and arginine, said additive solute being present within said solution in an effective amount whereby parenteral administration of said solution for an effective period of time results in the subustantial lowering or plasma cholesterol and the substantial reversal of arterial plaque deposition and degenerative changes associated with atherosclerosis.
15. The aqueous solution of claim 14, wherein said mixture further comprises lysine, methionine, phenylalanine, threonine, tryptophan and histidine.
16. The aqueous solution of claim 14 or 15, wherein said mixture further comprises alanine, proline, serine, tyrosine, glycine, glutamic acid, aspartic acid and cysteine.
17. The aqueous solution of claim 14 or 15, wherein arginine is present within said mixture in the greatest weight percentage based upon the total weight of said biologically active amino acids in said mixture.
18. The aqueous solution or claim 14 or 15, wherein said biologically active amino acids comprise their levorotatory form.
19. The aqueous solution of claim 14 or 15, wherein said biologically active amino acids comprise their crystalline form.
20. The aqueous solution of claim 14, wherein said mixture comprises:
From about 3% to about 10% isoleucine From about 3% to about 10% leucine From about 2.5% to about 7.5% lysine From about 2.5% to about 7.5% methionine From about 3% to about 10% phenylalanine From about 1% to about 4% threonine From about 1% to about 3% tryptophan From about 3% to about 10% valine From about 2% to about 20% alanine From about 7% to about 20% arginine From about 1% to about 4% histidine From about 0% to about 10% proline From about 0% to about 8% serine From about 0% to about 1% tyrosine From about 0% to about 10% glycine From about 0% to about 6% glutamic acid From about 0% to about 6% aspartic acid From about 0% to about 0% cysteine by weight based upon the total weight of said biologically active amino acids in said mixture.
From about 3% to about 10% isoleucine From about 3% to about 10% leucine From about 2.5% to about 7.5% lysine From about 2.5% to about 7.5% methionine From about 3% to about 10% phenylalanine From about 1% to about 4% threonine From about 1% to about 3% tryptophan From about 3% to about 10% valine From about 2% to about 20% alanine From about 7% to about 20% arginine From about 1% to about 4% histidine From about 0% to about 10% proline From about 0% to about 8% serine From about 0% to about 1% tyrosine From about 0% to about 10% glycine From about 0% to about 6% glutamic acid From about 0% to about 6% aspartic acid From about 0% to about 0% cysteine by weight based upon the total weight of said biologically active amino acids in said mixture.
21. The aqueous solution or claim 20, wherein said mixture comprises:
From about 4% to about 10% isoleucine From about 5% to about 10% leucine From about 4.5% to about 6.5% lysine From about 3.5% to about 5.5% methionine From about 4.5% to about 7.5% phenylalanine From about 2% to about 3.5% threonine From about 1% to about 2.5% tryptophan From about 4% to about 9% valine From about 7% to about 16% alanine From about 9% to about 18% arginine From about 1.5% to about 3.5% histidine From about 4.5% to about 8.5% proline From about 2.5% to about 6.5% serine From about 0% to about 1% tyrosine From about 3% to about 8% glycine From about 3.5% to about 5.5% glutamic acid From about 2% to about 4% aspartic acid From about 0% to about 1% cysteine by weight based upon the total weight of said biologically active amino acids within said mixture.
From about 4% to about 10% isoleucine From about 5% to about 10% leucine From about 4.5% to about 6.5% lysine From about 3.5% to about 5.5% methionine From about 4.5% to about 7.5% phenylalanine From about 2% to about 3.5% threonine From about 1% to about 2.5% tryptophan From about 4% to about 9% valine From about 7% to about 16% alanine From about 9% to about 18% arginine From about 1.5% to about 3.5% histidine From about 4.5% to about 8.5% proline From about 2.5% to about 6.5% serine From about 0% to about 1% tyrosine From about 3% to about 8% glycine From about 3.5% to about 5.5% glutamic acid From about 2% to about 4% aspartic acid From about 0% to about 1% cysteine by weight based upon the total weight of said biologically active amino acids within said mixture.
22. The aqueous solution of claim 20, wherein said additive solute further comprises a nutrient supplement.
23. The aqueous solution or claim 2, wherein said solvent comprises a sterile, ion free water base.
24. The aqueous solution of claim 20, wherein said additive solute is added to said aqueous base in amounts to produce a concentration of at least about 4 grams, preferably from about 7.5 to about 12 grams, and most preferably from about 9 to about 12 grams, of said biologically active amino acids per 100 milliliters of solution.
Applications Claiming Priority (2)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
US90593486A | 1986-09-10 | 1986-09-10 | |
US905,934 | 1986-09-10 |
Publications (1)
Publication Number | Publication Date |
---|---|
CA1290692C true CA1290692C (en) | 1991-10-15 |
Family
ID=25421711
Family Applications (1)
Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
---|---|---|---|
CA000546421A Expired - Fee Related CA1290692C (en) | 1986-09-10 | 1987-09-09 | Substrate composition for treating atherosclerosis |
Country Status (8)
Country | Link |
---|---|
KR (1) | KR880701558A (en) |
CN (1) | CN87106235A (en) |
AU (1) | AU8033487A (en) |
CA (1) | CA1290692C (en) |
DK (1) | DK253688A (en) |
IL (1) | IL83822A0 (en) |
WO (1) | WO1988001872A1 (en) |
ZA (1) | ZA876782B (en) |
Families Citing this family (11)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
AU620567B2 (en) * | 1987-10-06 | 1992-02-20 | Sharpe Research Pty. Limited | Prevention of soft tissue damage |
DE3916903A1 (en) * | 1989-05-24 | 1991-02-28 | Leopold Pharma Gmbh | WAESSER COMPOSITION FOR PARENTERAL NUTRITION |
AT394135B (en) * | 1989-06-22 | 1992-02-10 | Leopold Pharma Gmbh | Aqueous amino acid solution for parenteral alimentation |
AU655780B2 (en) * | 1990-10-30 | 1995-01-12 | Clintec Nutrition Company | A method and composition for the protection of a metabolic recovery of ischemic cardiac tissue |
US5891459A (en) | 1993-06-11 | 1999-04-06 | The Board Of Trustees Of The Leland Stanford Junior University | Enhancement of vascular function by modulation of endogenous nitric oxide production or activity |
US5852058A (en) * | 1993-06-11 | 1998-12-22 | The Board Of Trustees Of The Leland Stanford Junior University | Intramural delivery of nitric oxide enhancer for inhibiting lesion formation after vascular injury |
US5702065A (en) * | 1994-01-21 | 1997-12-30 | Gigatek Memory Systems | Tape cartridge with reduced tangential drive force |
TWI266614B (en) | 2000-10-13 | 2006-11-21 | Chugai Pharmaceutical Co Ltd | Compositions comprising valine for improving lipid metabolism |
EP1455602B1 (en) * | 2001-12-21 | 2006-03-08 | DSM IP Assets B.V. | Modified methionine rich food products and process for their manufacture |
CN103768601A (en) * | 2012-10-22 | 2014-05-07 | 中国科学院上海生命科学研究院 | Method for preventing and treating atherosclerosis through inhibition of micro-RNA155 |
CN110389231B (en) * | 2018-04-19 | 2022-09-06 | 北京市心肺血管疾病研究所 | Application of branched chain amino acid detection substance in preparation of post-operation prognosis risk assessment kit for aortic dissection patient |
Family Cites Families (3)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US2965542A (en) * | 1958-02-12 | 1960-12-20 | Castaigne Albert | Pharmaceutical product for reducing the proportion of cholesterol in the blood |
US3574857A (en) * | 1968-04-01 | 1971-04-13 | Smith Kline French Lab | Antilipidemic methods using glutamic acid,threonine and proline |
DE3228127A1 (en) * | 1982-07-28 | 1984-02-02 | Basf Ag, 6700 Ludwigshafen | Amino acid solutions for infusion |
-
1987
- 1987-09-08 AU AU80334/87A patent/AU8033487A/en not_active Abandoned
- 1987-09-08 WO PCT/US1987/002279 patent/WO1988001872A1/en not_active Application Discontinuation
- 1987-09-08 IL IL83822A patent/IL83822A0/en unknown
- 1987-09-09 CA CA000546421A patent/CA1290692C/en not_active Expired - Fee Related
- 1987-09-10 ZA ZA876782A patent/ZA876782B/en unknown
- 1987-09-10 CN CN198787106235A patent/CN87106235A/en active Pending
-
1988
- 1988-05-09 KR KR1019880700514A patent/KR880701558A/en not_active Application Discontinuation
- 1988-05-09 DK DK253688A patent/DK253688A/en not_active Application Discontinuation
Also Published As
Publication number | Publication date |
---|---|
DK253688D0 (en) | 1988-05-09 |
ZA876782B (en) | 1988-09-28 |
DK253688A (en) | 1988-05-09 |
IL83822A0 (en) | 1988-02-29 |
AU8033487A (en) | 1988-04-07 |
WO1988001872A1 (en) | 1988-03-24 |
KR880701558A (en) | 1988-11-03 |
CN87106235A (en) | 1988-05-18 |
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