Abstract
In liver cirrhosis, a marked splanchnic vasodilation causes an increase in portal blood flow, contributing to the development of portal hypertension. To evaluate if, in experimental cirrhosis, a different vascular reactivity exists between splenic and mesenteric components of the splanchnic circulation. Liver cirrhosis was induced in Sprague Dawley rats by common bile duct ligation. In sections of splenic and superior mesenteric arteries, cumulative dose-response curves were obtained. mRNA expression of endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS), inducible NOS (iNOS), and prostaglandin I2 synthase (PTGIS) was evaluated. In cirrhotic rats, mesenteric but not splenic arteries showed a significant increase in endothelium-dependent relaxation to acetylcholine. In control and cirrhotic rats, COX inhibition alone did not significantly change the response of mesenteric arteries to acetylcholine; after inhibiting also NOS, the relaxation was completely abolished in control but only partially decreased in cirrhotic rats. After the inhibition of COX and NOS, the relaxation to acetylcholine was similarly decreased in splenic arteries from control and cirrhotic animals. The contraction induced by phenylephrine of both mesenteric and splenic arteries was decreased in cirrhotic rats. PTGIS mRNA expression did not differ in splenic and mesenteric arteries from control and cirrhotic rats; in cirrhotic rats, eNOS and iNOS mRNA expression was increased in mesenteric but not in splenic vascular bed. In cirrhotic rats, a decreased splenic arterial response to vasoconstrictors, rather than an increased response to vasodilators, contributes to splanchnic vasodilation, while in mesenteric arteries also an increased response to vasodilators secondary to, but not only, eNOS and iNOS overexpression, plays a role.
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