Abstract

Myocardial capillary exchange capacity was investigated by stereologic and functional techniques in parallel during pressure-overload cardiac hypertrophy and after long-term antihypertensive therapy with the vasodilator felodipine. In 26-week-old female spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR) blood pressure increased by 25% and left ventricular weight (LVW/BW) increased by 18% compared to Wistar-Kyoto rats (WKY). Myocardial capillary surface and volume densities normalized for organ weight were similar in both ventricles for both strains. Moreover, capillary surface density was higher sub-epicardially (EPI) than in the subendocardium (ENDO) in the left ventricle of SHR. Thirteen weeks of felodipine-therapy (SHR-Felo) normalized blood pressure without affecting LVW/BW although a transition from concentric to eccentric hypertrophy is known to occur. Myocardial capillary surface and volume densities and the left ventricular ENDO-EPI-gradient in surface density were similar to untreated SHR. However, felodipine-treatment increased right ventricular weight and capillary volume density. Functional capillary exchange was estimated in terms of permeability surface area products (PS) for Cr-EDTA and vitamin B12 and normalized for organ weight. PSCr-EDTA, PSB12 and the ratio PSCr-EDTA/PSB12 (an index of capillary permeability) were similar in SHR and WKY. Furthermore, the relation between functional and stereological indices of exchange capacity was investigated in a multiple linear regression analysis. However, no significant correlation between PS and neither capillary surface nor volume density was found. In conclusion, myocardial capillary exchange capacity was well adapted to the pressure overload cardiac hypertrophy present in female SHR. Despite induction of right ventricular hypertrophy, felodipine-treatment did not affect capillary exchange capacity. Furthermore, when functional and stereologic estimates were performed in parallel, the importance of dynamic factors for myocardial capillary exchange capacity (e.g. heterogeneity) was illustrated.

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