Abstract
The beneficial effects of estrogen on arterial function in women are well established, whereas studies concerning the vascular role of androgens have produced conflicting results. In the present study, we examined the effects of androgen deprivation and of estrogen treatment on vascular responses in male rats. Vascular reactivity was studied in aortic rings excised from intact and castrated rats, which had been implanted with capsules containing either 17beta-estradiol (E2) or its vehicle for 5 days. Contractile responses to noradrenaline were potentiated by castration and by E2 treatment. Concentration-response curves for N-methyl-L-arginine and superoxide dismutase indicated that the tone-related release of NO increased in tissues from castrated, compared with intact rats, but was not affected by E2 treatment. Endothelium-dependent relaxation elicited by carbachol and histamine were not altered by castration and were attenuated by E2 in preparations from intact, but not from castrated rats. Moreover, aortic prostacyclin release dropped by about 40% after E2 treatment in tissues from both intact and castrated animals. Similarly, smooth muscle sensitivity to NO significantly decreased following castration and E2 treatment, as assessed by responses to sodium nitroprusside. Finally, no differences among groups were detected in platelet thromboxane A2 production. Thus, vascular responses in male rats were not improved by androgen deprivation alone or by E2 treatment, whose effects differed in the presence or absence of androgens. These findings provide evidence for the gender specificity of the vascular effects of estrogen and may be consistent with a beneficial role of physiologic levels of male sex hormones in arterial function.
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