We aimed to compare the effects of chronic and acute administration of structurally different antihypertensives, diuretics - indapamide and hydrochlorothiazide, ACE inhibitor - captopril and indapamide+captopril combination on endothelium-dependent relaxation of femoral artery isolated from nitric oxide (NO)-deficient rats. In the chronic experiment, femoral artery was isolated from Wistar rats receiving L-NAME (40 mg/kg/day) solely or with indapamide (1 mg/kg/day), hydrochlorothiazide (10 mg/kg/day), captopril (10 mg/kg/day), and indapamide+captopril combination for seven weeks. In the acute in vitro experiment, the incubation medium with femoral artery isolated from L-NAMEhypertensive rats was supplemented with investigated antihypertensives in the same concentration 10-4 mol/l. Interestingly, chronic L-NAME treatment did not cause a reduction of vasorelaxation. Indapamide+captopril elevated relaxation above the control level and completely prevented blood pressure increase induced by L-NAME. Acute incubation with captopril only or indapamide+captopril improved relaxation of femoral artery isolated from L-NAMEhypertensive rats, while the incubation with all antihypertensives increased vasorelaxation of femoral artery isolated from control Wistar rats. In conclusion, NO might be involved in the indapamide- and hydrochlorothiazide-induced improvement of vasorelaxation, while different vasorelaxing factors (prostacyclin, EDHF) contribute to the captoprilinduced improvement of vasorelaxation. During the chronic treatment additive and synergic effects of indapamide and captopril may contribute to the prevention of hypertension and increase of vasorelaxation., M. Sládková, S. Kojšová, L. Jendeková, O. Pecháňová., and Obsahuje bibliografii
We studied the effect of thiazide-like diuretic – indapamide on fibrosis development in the left ventricle of young spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR) and assessed the involvement of nitric oxide in this process. Six-week-old male SHR were treated with indapamide (1 mg/kg/day) for six weeks. Age-matched SHR were used as hypertensive and Wistar-Kyoto rats (WKY) as normotensive control. Systolic blood pressure was measured by tail-cuff plethysmography. Nitric oxide synthase (NOS) activity, protein expressions of endothelial (eNOS) and inducible NOS (iNOS), myocardial fibrosis and collagen type I and III were determined in the left ventricle. Indapamide treatment partially prevented SBP increase in SHR (SHR+Indapamide: 157±4, SHR: 171±3, WKY: 119±3 mmHg). Indapamide prevented myocardial fibrosis development in SHR, but without affecting collagen type I to type III ratio. Indapamide did not affect NOS activity as well as eNOS and iNOS protein expressions in the left ventricles evaluated by both Western blot and immunohistochemically. In conclusion, our results indicate that indapamide-induced prevention of myocardial fibrosis is not mediated by nitric oxide-related mechanism., P. Janega, S. Kojšová, L. Jendeková, P. Babál, O. Pecháňová., and Obsahuje bibliografii a bibliografické odkazy
High blood pressure (BP) of L-NAME hypertensive rats is maintained not only by the absence of nitric oxide (NO)-dependent vasodilatation but also by the enhancement of both sympathetic and angiotensin II-dependent vasoconstriction. The aim of the present study was to evaluate the role of inhibitory G (Gi) proteins, which are involv ed in tonic sympathetic vasoconstriction, in the pathogenesis of NO-deficient hypertension. We therefore studied BP response to chronic L-NAME administration (60 mg/kg/day for 4 weeks) in rats in which the in vivo inactivation of Gi proteins was induced by injection of pertussis toxin (PTX, 10 μg/kg i.v.). The impairment of sympathetic vasoconstriction due to PTX-induced Gi protein inactivation prevents the full development of NO-deficient hypertension because BP of PTX-treated rats subjected to chronic L-NAME administration did not reach hypertensive values. Nevertheless, chronic NO synthase inhibition per se is capable to increase moderately BP even in PTX-treated rats. Our data suggest that the sympathetic vasoconstriction is essential for the development of established NO-deficient hypertension., J. Zicha ... [et al.]., and Obsahuje seznam literatury