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Query: EC:3.4.15.1 (
ACE
)
18,300
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Endothelial dysfunction
is emerging as an important factor in the early development of acute and chronic renal disease. Drugs aimed specifically at rectifying this aberration are being developed, although other established agents such as calcium antagonists,
angiotensin converting enzyme
(
ACE
) inhibitors and HMG CoA reductase inhibitors also have beneficial effects in this setting. Calcium antagonists are particularly effective at ameliorating acute renal ischaemia associated with endothelial dysfunction. Combination therapy with a calcium antagonist and an
ACE
inhibitor might optimise the beneficial effects of calcium channel blockade on the sequelae of endothelial dysfunction in chronic renal failure.
...
PMID:Endothelial function and the kidney. An emerging target for cardiovascular therapy. 903 51
The generation of nitric oxide by the vascular endothelium maintains a continuous vasodilator tone that is essential for the regulation of blood flow and blood pressure. Nitric oxide also contributes to the control of platelet aggregation and has important antiatherogenic effects. These properties are mediated by the action of constitutive nitric oxide synthase and subsequent activation by nitric oxide of soluble guanylate cyclase. Impaired release of nitric oxide occurs in most animal and human models of hypertension, contributing to the increased peripheral resistance and most likely to the development of cardiovascular complications. Antihypertensive medications (angiotensin-converting enzyme [
ACE
] inhibitors and calcium channel blockers) appear to prevent the impairment of nitric oxide-mediated vasodilation in experimental hypertension, though in humans the data are not as clear. Reduced nitric oxide release appears therefore to be a consequence rather than a cause of high blood pressure, and the reduction in blood pressure per se is most important. In hyperlipidaemia, endothelium-dependent relaxations are reduced probably due to the inhibitory action of oxidized low-density lipoproteins on endothelium-dependent relaxations. Lipid-lowering strategies and, more recently,
ACE
inhibition have been demonstrated to improve nitric oxide dependent coronary vasodilation in hypercholesterolaemic patients with and without atheromatous coronary disease. Nitric oxide dependent vasodilation is also impaired in insulin- and non-insulin-dependent diabetes as well as in healthy aging.
Endothelial dysfunction
may be improved in non-insulin-dependent diabetes by administration of the antioxidants, supporting the hypothesis that nitric oxide inactivation by oxygen-derived free radicals contributes to abnormal vascular reactivity in diabetes.
...
PMID:Impairment and restoration of nitric oxide-dependent vasodilation in cardiovascular disease. 948 1
From the vascular point of view, cardiac failure is characterised by increased systemic resistances secondary to an increased concentration of a number of vasoconstrictor substances and also to decreased endothelium dependent vasodilatation.
Endothelial dysfunction
has been described both in man and in animal models, but its causes are not well understood. Such dysfunction could be due to a decrease in the production of nitric oxide, a decrease in its vasodilator effect due to an increased degradation or an increased vasoconstrictor tone. Recent data suggests an improvement or prevention of this endothelial dysfunction observed in cardiac failure by physical training and by chronic treatment with an
angiotensin converting enzyme
inhibitor. The improvement or preservation of endothelial function induced by exercise or
ACE
inhibitor could explain some of the benefits of these treatments in terms of tissue perfusion and haemodynamic conditions.
...
PMID:[Endothelial dysfunction in cardial failure: potential mechanisms]. 951 11
Endothelial dysfunction
plays the key role in the development of cardiovascular system disorders. Using certain markers it is possible to evaluate the endothelial function alterations and in this way to propose the disease prognosis. Recently the number of information concerning possible reversibility of these changes and the pharmacological intervention increases. Partial data about endothelium protective properties of
ACE
inhibitors, hypolipidemics, pentoxifyllin, Ca2+ channel blockers, lazaroids, glycosaminoglycanes exist. In experimental conditions it is possible to evoke endothelial dysfunction and evaluate the effects of these substances. Glycosaminoglycan sulodexide reduced endothelial losses at in vitro conditions of vessel perfusion on the model of endothelium damage by vasoconstrictive stimuli. Further evidence of these substances efficacy is required for the clinical evaluation of their endothelium protective properties. The research direction in this field will certainly provide such information concerning the endothelial function moderation which may be able to change the strategy of vascular diseases pharmacotherapy. (Tab. 5, Ref. 66.)
...
PMID:[Endothelial diseases and endothelium-protective agents]. 991 51
The vascular endothelium plays a key role in the local regulation of vascular tone by the release of vasodilator substances (i.e. endothelium-derived relaxing factor (EDRF = nitric oxide, NO) and prostacyclin) and vasoconstrictor substances (i.e. thromboxane A2, free radicals, or endothelin). Using either agents like acetylcholine or changes in flow to stimulate the release of EDRF (NO), clinical studies have revealed the importance of EDRF in both basal and stimulated control of vascular tone in large epicardial coronary arteries and in the coronary microcirculation. The regulatory function of the endothelium is altered by cardiovascular risk factors or disorders such as hypercholesterolemia, chronic smoking, hypertension or chronic heart failure.
Endothelial dysfunction
appears to have detrimental functional consequences as well as adverse longterm effects, including vascular remodelling.
Endothelial dysfunction
is associated with impaired tissue perfusion particularly during stress and paradoxical vasoconstriction of large conduit vessels including the coronary arteries. These effects may cause or contribute to myocardial ischemia. Several mechanisms may be involved in the development of endothelial dysfunction, such as reduced synthesis and release of EDRF or enhanced inactivation of EDRF after its release from endothelial cells by radicals or oxidized low-density lipoprotein (LDL). Increased plasma levels of oxidized LDL have been noted in chronic smokers and are related to the extent endothelial dysfunction, raising the possibility that chronic smoking potentiates endothelial dysfunction by increasing circulating and tissue levels of oxidized LDL. In heart failure, cytokines and/or reduced flow (reflecting reduced shear stress) may be involved in the development of endothelial dysfunction and can be reversed by physical training. Other mechanisms include an activated renin-angiotensin system (i.e. postmyocardial infarction) with increased breakdown of bradykinin by enhanced
angiotensin converting enzyme
(
ACE
) activity. There is evidence that endogenous bradykinin is involved in coronary vasomotor control both in coronary conduit and resistance vessels.
ACE
inhibitors enhance endothelial function by a bradykinin-dependent mechanism and probably also by blunting the generation of superoxide anion.
Endothelial dysfunction
appears to be reversible by administering L-arginine, the precursor of nitric oxide, lowering cholesterol levels, physical training, antioxidants such as vitamin C, or
ACE
inhibition.
...
PMID:Endothelial dysfunction in human disease. 1007 15
Spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR) begin to die from cardiovascular complications at approximately 15 months of age. We tested whether chronic
ACE
-inhibitor treatment would extend the lifespan of such old animals. We also studied cardiac hypertrophy and function, endothelial function and expression, and activity of NO synthase (eNOS). One hundred 15-month-old SHR were randomized into 3 groups, control (n=10), placebo-treated (n=45), and ramipril-treated with an antihypertensive dose of 1 mg. kg(-1). d(-1) in drinking water (n=45). Ex vivo experiments were performed after 15 months (control) and 21 months, when approximately 80% of the placebo group had died. Late treatment with ramipril significantly extended lifespan of the animals from 21 to 30 months. Fully established cardiac hypertrophy, observed in placebo-treated animals and in controls, was significantly reversed by ramipril treatment. In isolated working hearts, a significantly improved function associated with increased cardiac eNOS expression was seen versus placebo and control hearts.
Endothelial dysfunction
in isolated aortic rings from control and placebo-treated SHR was significantly improved by
ACE
inhibition and associated with enhanced NO release. Late treatment of SHR with the
ACE
inhibitor ramipril extended lifespan from 21 to 30 months, which is comparable to the lifespan of untreated normotensive Wistar-Kyoto rats. This lifespan extension, probably due to blood pressure reduction, correlated with increased eNOS expression and activity followed by a regression of left ventricular hypertrophy and cardiac and vascular dysfunction.
...
PMID:Late treatment with ramipril increases survival in old spontaneously hypertensive rats. 1045 56
Endothelial dysfunction
plays a key role in the pathogenesis of diabetic vascular disease. The endothelium controls the tone of the underlying vascular smooth muscle through the production of vasodilator mediators. The endothelium-derived relaxing factors (EDRF) comprise nitric oxide (NO), prostacyclin, and a still elusive endothelium-derived hyperpolarizing factor (EDHF). Impaired endothelium-dependent vasodilation has been demonstrated in various vascular beds of different animal models of diabetes and in humans with type 1 and 2 diabetes. Several mechanisms of endothelial dysfunction have been reported, including impaired signal transduction or substrate availibility, impaired release of EDRF, increased destruction of EDRF, enhanced release of endothelium-derived constricting factors and decreased sensitivity of the vascular smooth muscle to EDRF. The principal mediators of hyperglycaemia-induced endothelial dysfunction may be activation of protein kinase C, increased activity of the polyol pathway, non-enzymatic glycation and oxidative stress. Correction of these pathways, as well as administration of
ACE
inhibitors and folate, has been shown to improve endothelium-dependent vasodilation in diabetes. Since the mechanisms of endothelial dysfunction appear to differ according to the diabetic model and the vascular bed under study, it is important to select clinically relevant models for future research of endothelial dysfunction.
...
PMID:Endothelial dysfunction in diabetes. 1088 79
The main etiology for mortality and a great percent of morbidity in patients with diabetes mellitus is atherosclerosis. A hypothesis for the initial lesion of atherosclerosis is endothelial dysfunction, defined pragmatically as changes in the concentration of the chemical messengers produced by the endothelial cell and/or by blunting of the nitric oxide-dependent vasodilatory response to acetylcholine or hyperemia.
Endothelial dysfunction
has been documented in patients with diabetes and in individuals with insulin resistance or at high risk for developing type 2 diabetes. Factors associated with endothelial dysfunction in diabetes include activation of protein kinase C, overexpression of growth factors and/or cytokines, and oxidative stress. Several therapeutic interventions have been tested in clinical trials aimed at improving endothelial function in patients with diabetes. Insulin sensitizers may have a beneficial effect in the short term, but the virtual absence of trials with cardiovascular end-points preclude any definitive conclusion. Two trials offer optimism that treatment with
ACE
inhibitors may have a positive impact on the progression of atherosclerosis. Although widely used, the effect of hypolipidemic agents on endothelial function in diabetes is not clear. The role of antioxidant therapy is controversial. No data have been published regarding the effects of hormonal replacement therapy on endothelial dysfunction in postmenopausal women with type 2 diabetes.
...
PMID:Diabetes and endothelial dysfunction: a clinical perspective. 1115 15
Endothelial dysfunction
is associated with hypertension, hypercholesterolemia, and heart failure. We tested the hypothesis that spontaneously diabetic Goto-Kakizaki (GK) rats, a model for type 2 diabetes, exhibit endothelial dysfunction. Rats also received a high-sodium diet (6% NaCl [wt/wt]) and chronic angiotensin type 1 (AT(1)) receptor blockade (10 mg/kg PO valsartan for 8 weeks). Compared with age-matched nondiabetic Wistar control rats, GK rats had higher blood glucose levels (9.3+/-0.5 versus 6.9+/-0.2 mmol/L for control rats), 2.7-fold higher serum insulin levels, and impaired glucose tolerance (all P<0.05). Telemetry-measured mean blood pressure was 15 mm Hg higher in GK rats (P<0.01) compared with control rats, whereas heart rates were not different. Heart weight- and kidney weight-to-body weight ratios were higher in GK rats (P<0.05), and 24-hour albuminuria was increased 50%. Endothelium-mediated relaxation of noradrenaline-precontracted mesenteric arterial rings by acetylcholine was impaired compared with the control condition (P<0.05), whereas the sodium nitroprusside-induced relaxation was similar. Preincubation of the arterial rings with the NO synthase inhibitor N(G)-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester and the cyclooxygenase inhibitor diclofenac inhibited relaxations to acetylcholine almost completely in GK rats but not in Wistar rats, suggesting that endothelial dysfunction can be in part attributed to reduced relaxation via arterial K(+) channels. Perivascular monocyte/macrophage infiltration and intercellular adhesion molecule-1 overexpression were observed in GK rat kidneys. A high-sodium diet increased blood pressure by 24 mm Hg and 24-hour albuminuria by 350%, induced cardiac hypertrophy, impaired endothelium-dependent relaxation further, and aggravated inflammation (all P<0.05). The serum level of 8-isoprostaglandin F(2alpha), a vasoconstrictor and antinatriuretic arachidonic acid metabolite produced by oxidative stress, was increased 400% in GK rats on a high-sodium diet. Valsartan decreased blood pressure in rats fed a low-sodium diet and prevented the inflammatory response. In rats fed a high-sodium diet, valsartan did not decrease blood pressure or improve endothelial dysfunction but protected against albuminuria, inflammation, and oxidative stress. As measured by quantitative autoradiography, AT(1) receptor expression in the medulla was decreased in GK compared with Wistar rats, whereas cortical AT(1) receptor expression, medullary and cortical angiotensin type 2 (AT(2)) receptor expressions, and adrenal
ACE
and neutral endopeptidase expressions were unchanged. A high-sodium diet did not influence renal AT(1), AT(2),
ACE
, or neutral endopeptidase expressions. In valsartan-treated GK rats, the cortical and medullary AT(1) receptor expressions were decreased in the presence and absence of a high-sodium diet. A high-sodium diet increased plasma brain natriuretic peptide concentrations in presence and absence of valsartan treatment. We conclude that hypertension in GK rats is salt sensitive and associated with endothelial dysfunction and perivascular inflammation. AT(1) receptor blockade ameliorates inflammation during a low-sodium diet and partially protects against salt-induced vascular damage by blood pressure-independent mechanisms.
...
PMID:Endothelial dysfunction and salt-sensitive hypertension in spontaneously diabetic Goto-Kakizaki rats. 1123 Mar 14
The
ACE
gene is a candidate gene for cardiovascular disease.
Endothelial dysfunction
is considered an intermediate phenotype in the pathogenesis of hypertension and atherosclerosis. We evaluated the role of
ACE
gene polymorphism in endothelial function of young healthy humans. We assessed
ACE
genotype (deletion [D]/insertion [I] polymorphism) in 92 young healthy individuals. In 88 of them, endothelium-dependent (flow-mediated) vasodilation and endothelium-independent (nitroglycerin-induced) vasodilation were measured in the common femoral artery and in the brachial (n=84) artery by echo Doppler technique. In 35 subjects, we also applied the forearm perfusion technique to quantify the responses of the forearm vascular bed to 3 increasing doses of 2 endothelium-dependent vasodilators (acetylcholine and bradykinin) and 1 endothelium-independent vasodilator (sodium nitroprusside). The D allele of the
ACE
gene was associated with a significant blunting (Delta approximately 26%) of endothelium-dependent vasodilation in the femoral artery (P=0.02) but not in the brachial artery (P=0.55) or in the forearm microcirculation (P=0.70 to 0.80). Endothelium-independent vasodilation was unaffected by the
ACE
genotype. In young healthy humans, the D allele of the
ACE
gene is associated with selective endothelial dysfunction of the femoral artery. It remains to be determined whether this association discloses a causal role in vascular, particularly peripheral artery, disease.
...
PMID:ACE genotype and endothelium-dependent vasodilation of conduit arteries and forearm microcirculation in humans. 1149 59
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