The principal drugs affecting blood components to relieve Raynaud's disease are the E and F class prostaglandins and the prostacyclins. All are believed to act by vasodilation.
Iloprost, a synthetic analogue of prostacyclin, is the key clinical example:
Evening primrose oil (concentrated linoleic and gamolenic acids) and fish oil (omega-3 marine triglycerides) are metabolised to prostaglandin and prostacyclin-like elements
The steroid, stanozolol, and the thromboxane-A2-receptor antagonist, dazoxiben, have not as yet proved to be efficacious in trials.
Reference:
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