Abstract

Long-term effects of captopril on passive sodium permeability and cellular sodium concentration in the aorta of spontaneously hypertensive rats were examined in terms of contractile properties of the muscle. In cold lithium solution, cellular sodium in the aorta isolated from spontaneously hypertensive rats leaked more rapidly than did that isolated from Wistar Kyoto rats (WKY), suggesting an increased sodium permeability in the aorta of spontaneously hypertensive rats. Six weeks of treatment with captopril reduced the increased sodium permeability after hydralazine had failed. Inhibition of the sodium pump by incubating the aorta in potassium-free solution produced a slowly developing contraction which was associated with accumulation of cellular sodium. Both the magnitude of contraction and the accumulation of sodium during exposure to potassium-free solution for 1 hour were significantly less in the aorta isolated from spontaneously hypertensive rats treated with captopril compared with those from control spontaneously hypertensive rats. These data suggest that after prolonged administration, captopril alters the abnormal sodium permeability of vascular smooth muscle in spontaneously hypertensive rats and that the restoration of normal permeability reduces vascular tone.

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