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Safety and feasibility of long-term intravenous sodium nitrite infusion in healthy volunteers

  • Ryszard M. Pluta
  • , Edward H. Oldfield
  • , Kamran D. Bakhtian
  • , Ali Reza Fathi
  • , René K. Smith
  • , Hetty L. DeVroom
  • , Masoud Nahavandi
  • , Sukyung Woo
  • , William D. Figg
  • , Russell R. Lonser
  • National Institutes of Health
  • University of Virginia
  • Cantonal Hospital Aarau

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

101 Scopus citations

Abstract

Background: Infusion of sodium nitrite could provide sustained therapeutic concentrations of nitric oxide (NO) for the treatment of a variety of vascular disorders. The study was developed to determine the safety and feasibility of prolonged sodium nitrite infusion. Methodology: Healthy volunteers, aged 21 to 60 years old, were candidates for the study performed at the National Institutes of Health (NIH; protocol 05-N-0075) between July 2007 and August 2008. All subjects provided written consent to participate. Twelve subjects (5 males, 7 females; mean age, 38.8±9.2 years (range, 21-56 years)) were intravenously infused with increasing doses of sodium nitrite for 48 hours (starting dose at 4.2 μg/kg/hr; maximal dose of 533.8 μg/kg/hr). Clinical, physiologic and laboratory data before, during and after infusion were analyzed. Findings: The maximal tolerated dose for intravenous infusion of sodium nitrite was 267 μg/kg/hr. Dose limiting toxicity occurred at 446 μg/kg/hr. Toxicity included a transient asymptomatic decrease of mean arterial blood pressure (more than 15 mmHg) and/or an asymptomatic increase of methemoglobin level above 5%. Nitrite, nitrate, S-nitrosothiols concentrations in plasma and whole blood increased in all subjects and returned to preinfusion baseline values within 12 hours after cessation of the infusion. The mean half-life of nitrite estimated at maximal tolerated dose was 45.3 minutes for plasma and 51.4 minutes for whole blood. Conclusion: Sodium nitrite can be safely infused intravenously at defined concentrations for prolonged intervals. These results should be valuable for developing studies to investigate new NO treatment paradigms for a variety of clinical disorders, including cerebral vasospasm after subarachnoid hemorrhage, and ischemia of the heart, liver, kidney and brain, as well as organ transplants, blood-brain barrier modulation and pulmonary hypertension.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere14504
JournalPLOS ONE
Volume6
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - 2011

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