Role of ranolazine in heart failure: From cellular to clinic perspective
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Elsevier B.V.
Abstract
Ranolazine was approved by the US Food and Drug Administration as an antianginal drug in 2006, and has been used since in certain groups of patients with stable angina. The therapeutic action of ranolazine was initially attributed to inhibitory effects on fatty acids metabolism. As investigations went on, however, it developed that the main beneficial effects of ranolazine arise from its action on the late sodium current in the heart. Since late sodium currents were discovered to be involved in various heart pathologies such as ischemia, arrhythmias, systolic and diastolic dysfunctions, and all these conditions are associated with heart failure, ranolazine has in some way been tested either directly or indirectly on heart failure in numerous experimental and clinical studies. As the heart continuously remodels following any sort of severe injury, the inhibition by ranolazine of the underlying mechanisms of cardiac remodeling including ion disturbances, oxidative stress, inflammation, apoptosis, fibrosis, metabolic dysregulation, and neurohormonal impairment are discussed, along with unresolved issues. A projection of pathologies targeted by ranolazine from cellular level to clinical is provided in this review. © 2022
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Angina, Cardiac remodeling, Heart failure, Late sodium current, Mitochondrial function, Na+-ca2+ exchanger (ncx), Humans, Ranolazine, Sodium channel blockers, Reactive oxygen metabolite, Sodium channel, Sodium channel blocking agent, Apoptosis, Autonomic nervous system, Cardiac muscle cell, Cell metabolism, Diastolic dysfunction, Drug approval, Drug effect, Drug mechanism, Endocrine disease, Experimental study, Fatty acid metabolism, Food and drug administration, Heart arrhythmia, Heart failure with preserved ejection fraction, Heart failure with reduced ejection fraction, Heart muscle fibrosis, Heart muscle ischemia, Heart ventricle remodeling, Human, Injury severity, Metabolic disorder, Neurologic disease, Nonhuman, Oxidative stress, Review, Sodium current, Stable angina pectoris, Systolic dysfunction, United states