Abstract
Chronic cocaine abusers experience brain and peripheral vascular dysfunction, the severity of which tends to be greater in men than women. The mechanisms underlying these effects of cocaine are unknown. Because nitric oxide (NO) abnormalities play key roles in development of vascular dysfunction in several disorders, we determined whether vascular nitric oxide end product (NOx) levels, which can serve as markers of systemic vascular NO production, are reduced in cocaine-dependent (CD) subjects. Plasma samples from 24 CD men, 12 CD women, and matched comparison subjects (19 men, 14 women) were analyzed with a Sievers 280i nitric oxide chemiluminescence detection analysis system. NOx levels in comparison in women and men were 24.9 ± 6.6 and 23.3 ± 5.7 μmol/L, and in CD women and men were 22.5 ± 8.4 and 13.0 ± 9.6 μmol/L, respectively. ANCOVA analysis, adjusted for lifetime smoking, indicated group (P < 0.0005) and sex (P = 0.04) effects, both of which survived posthoc Scheffe tests. Reduced NOx levels in CD men drove the group difference. These data suggest that chronic cocaine abuse is associated with reduced NOx levels in men, although the finding also may be attributable to factors indirectly related to cocaine abuse, including cohort differences in other drug use or lifestyle factors. These findings warrant additional studies to more directly characterize vascular NO turnover in cocaine abusers and to establish whether NO abnormalities contribute to cocaine-associated vascular dysfunction and to sex differences in cocaine's effects.
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