Abstract

1 Characteristics of cyclic GMP- and cyclic AMP-mediated relaxation in aortic segments of rats with chronic heart failure (CHF) and the effects of chronic treatment with an angiotensin I converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitor, trandolapril, were examined 8 weeks after coronary artery ligation. 2 Cardiac output indices of coronary artery-ligated and sham-operated rats were 125+/-8 and 189+/-10 ml min(-1) kg(-1), respectively (P<0.05), indicating the development of CHF at this period. 3 The maximal relaxant response of aortic segments to 10 microM acetylcholine in rats with CHF and sham-operated rats was 64.0+/-5.7 and 86.9+/-1.9%, respectively (P<0.05), whereas the relaxant response to sodium nitroprusside (SNP) remained unchanged. Tissue cyclic GMP content in rats with CHF was lower than that of sham-operated rats. 4 In endothelium-intact segments of rats with CHF, the maximal relaxant response to 10 microM isoprenaline (44.5+/-6.7%) was lower that sham-operated rats (81.3+/-2.5%, P<0.05) and the concentration-response curve for NKH477, a water-soluble forskolin, was shifted to the right without a reduction in the maximal response. Isoprenaline-induced relaxation of aortic segments was attenuated by NG-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME) in sham-operated rats, but not in rats with CHF. Relaxation to 30 microM dibutyryl cyclic AMP in rats with CHF (26.8+/-2.7%) was lower than that in sham-operated rats (63.4+/-11.8%, P<0.05). 5 Trandolapril (3 mg kg(-1) day(-1)) was orally administered from the 2nd to 8th week after the operation. Aortic blood flow of rats with CHF (38.5+/-3.6 ml min(-1)) was lower than that of sham-operated rats (55.0+/-3.0 ml min(-1)), and this reduction was reversed (54.1+/-3.4 ml min(-1)) by treatment with trandolapril. The diminished responsiveness described above was normalized in the trandolapril-treated rat with CHF (i.e., the maximal relaxation to acetylcholine, 94.7+/-1.0%; that to isoprenaline, 80.5+/-2.8%; that to dibutyryl cyclic AMP, 54.7+/-6.2%). However, aortic segments of trandolapril-treated rats with CHF, L-NAME did not attenuate isoprenaline-induced relaxation and the tissue cyclic GMP level was not fully restored, suggesting that the ability of the endothelium to produce NO was still partially damaged. 6 The results suggest that vasorelaxation in CHF, diminished mainly due to dysfunction in endothelial nitric oxide (NO) production and cyclic AMP-mediated signal transduction, was partially restored by long-term treatment with trandolapril. The mechanism underlying the restoration may be attributed in part to prevention of CHF-induced endothelial dysfunction.

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