Abstract

The hypothesis was tested that vardenafil, a PDE5 inhibitor, specifically enhances coronary vasodilation during acidosis. In isolated constant pressure perfused guinea pig hearts, infusion of vardenafil (<or= 1 microM) increased coronary flow concentration-dependently 34 % above baseline. In parallel, cGMP release increased (0.44 +/- 0.094 vs. 0.14 +/- 0.017 pmol/min x g at 0.5 microM vardenafil vs. baseline). Flow increases occurred in the absence of changes in heart function (LVP, heart rate, dP/dt(max), heart rate - pressure product). Infusion of the NO synthase blocker L-NMMA (100 microM) caused a rightward shift of the dose-response curve of vardenafil. To test whether vardenafil treatment may enhance metabolic coronary vasodilation, arterial pCO(2) was raised from 38 to 61 mmHg, which resulted in a steady state flow increase of 18.8 +/- 4.5%. Infusion of vardenafil, given at a threshold flow enhancing concentration, doubled the coronary flow response during hypercapnic acidosis to 38.4 +/- 4.2 % (p=0.004). This flow amplification during acidosis was not shared by the K(ATP) channel opener cromakalim, indicating a specific effect of vardenafil on flow control during myocardial acidosis. We conclude that vardenafil specifically relaxes coronary resistance vessels through NO/cGMP-dependent pathways and increases the coronary flow response toward hypercapnic acidosis. This finding further supports the importance of the NO-cGMP axis in mediation of this flow response.

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