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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)
Nonpeptide angiotensin AT-1 and AT-2 receptor antagonists were administered cerebroventricularly to rats and their effects on various types of angiotensin II (AII)-stimulated
water
and NaCl intakes examined. The AT-1 receptor blocker, losartan potassium (DUP 753), inhibited
water
intake evoked by central administration of AII, with the 50% inhibitory dose being less than 0.1 microgram. The functional inhibition by higher doses lasted at least 1 h. The AT-2 receptor antagonist PD 123319 also inhibited AII-induced
water
intake, but at doses about tenfold higher than losartan. Central, but not peripheral, administration of losartan partially inhibited NaCl intake induced by either sodium depletion, treatment with
angiotensin converting enzyme
inhibitors (CEIs), or adrenalectomy. PD 123319 partially inhibited NaCl intake induced by both sodium depletion and administration of CEI, but not after adrenalectomy. Another AT-2 receptor antagonist, CGP 42112A, likewise inhibited NaCl intake after sodium deprivation. These data suggest that both AT-1 and AT-2 receptor subtypes in the brain are involved in angiotensin-related
water
and NaCl intakes.
...
PMID:Effect of nonpeptide angiotensin receptor antagonists on water intake and salt appetite in rats. 139 12
Ageing of the kidneys has long been associated with a fall in the number of functioning nephrons resulting in a reduction of renal blood flow and glomerular filtration. This narrow concept of age-related changes in renal function has been developed chiefly during the last few years by Brenner et al. on the basis of experimental studies conducted on rodents. According to these authors, the size and frequency of segmental and focal lesions of glomerulosclerosis increase regularly with age, and in its final phase this pathology results in occlusion of glomerular capillaries. Renal ageing, therefore, can be assimilated to the nephron reduction models obtained by surgical ablation. The hypothesis that hypofiltration in certain nephrons is compensated by hyperfiltration in healthy glomerulis, leading to a vicious circle of self-destruction, was then applied to both ageing and experimental renal impairment: the smaller the number of nephrons, the greater the filtration achieved by the remaining nephrons, a process that accelerates the probability of their destruction. Conversely, any attempt to reduce intracapillary pressure or glomerular filtration slows down the progression of renal failure. This hypothesis is supported by experiments showing that reduction of protein intake or chronic inhibition of
angiotensin I-converting enzyme
activity are truly capable of limiting the progression of glomerulosclerosis induced in rats by partial renal mass ablation. Similarly, prolonged food restriction increases the life expectancy of rodents and almost totally prevents the occurrence of glomerulosclerosis. The experimental finding that degenerative renal lesions do not necessarily develop with age raises the problem of normal and pathological ageing. With an adequate choice of rats' food, strain and sanitary surroundings it is possible to obtain very old animals devoid of occluded glomerular capillaries and loss of nephron. What about the functional and structural changes due to ageing and not to pathology? This question has given rise to numerous studies which concluded, on the whole, that there exists a normal ageing of the kidneys without loss of nephron and that ageing is expressed by the fact that the kidneys have difficulties in adjusting themselves to disturbances in the inner environment. As regards renal functional reserve, response to the antidiuretic hormone in case of
water
restriction, or stimulation of the renin-angiotensin system in response to decrease of sodium intake, it is clear that the renal cells responsible for glomerular filtration, tubular transport or synthesis and release of peptidic hormones exhibit functional alterations that are age-related. The cellular and molecular mechanisms underlying these physiological changes are little known.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Normal and pathological renal aging in animals]. 140 79
We investigated the role of atrial natriuretic factor (ANF) and the renin-angiotensin system as well as the effects of losartan in rats with aortocaval (AC) shunts. Right atrial and left ventricular end-diastolic pressures (LVEDP) were higher and mean arterial blood pressure (MAP) was lower in AC shunt animals than in their controls. AC shunt rats presented marked cardiac hypertrophy, decreased right atrial ANF concentration, and increased ventricular ANF content and concentration. Plasma ANF levels were elevated, and hematocrit was lower in AC shunt animals than in controls. Captopril or losartan treatment decreased MAP and returned LVEDP to sham-operated control values. A clear regression of cardiac hypertrophy was evident in both treated AC shunt groups, with plasma ANF levels tending to follow those in sham-operated rats. Plasma COOH-terminal ANF levels were decreased and urinary volume and hematocrit were increased in losartan-treated AC shunt animals. We conclude that chronic
angiotensin converting enzyme
inhibition and angiotension II receptor antagonism improved hemodynamic conditions, diminished
water
retention, reversed cardiac hypertrophy, and restored plasma and tissue ANF to more "normal" levels in rats with moderate high-output heart failure.
...
PMID:Chronic captopril and losartan (DuP 753) administration in rats with high-output heart failure. 141 10
Dahl salt-sensitive (S) rats fed a high salt diet develop hypertension, hyperlipidemia, and progressive renal disease. Previous studies have suggested that lipids may be important in the pathogenesis of glomerulosclerosis in Dahl S rats. To investigate this possibility, Dahl S rats fed 4% NaCl chow were treated chronically with the cholesterol synthesis inhibitor lovastatin. After 22 weeks, lovastatin-treated rats had a 38% reduction in serum cholesterol, a 76% reduction in urine albumin excretion, and one-sixth the incidence of focal glomerulosclerosis compared with vehicle-treated control rats. Blood pressure in lovastatin-treated rats was significantly (p < 0.05) lower than that in vehicle-treated rats both early in the study (4 weeks of treatment) and at the end of the protocol. Lovastatin had no effect on glomerular filtration rate or glomerular ultrafiltration dynamics. The efficacy of
angiotensin converting enzyme
inhibitors in attenuating proteinuria and experimental glomerular disease may be dependent on sodium intake. Thus, we also investigated the effects of long-term enalapril treatment on glomerular injury in Dahl S rats fed high salt chow. Enalapril treatment (50 or 200 mg/l drinking
water
) significantly lowered blood pressure in Dahl S rats, but did not significantly affect albuminuria or glomerulosclerosis. Enalapril also had no effect on glomerular hemodynamics. These results suggest that lipids may be important in the development of both glomerular disease and hypertension in Dahl S rats and that
angiotensin converting enzyme
inhibition may not affect the course of renal disease in a setting of high salt intake.
...
PMID:Lovastatin but not enalapril reduces glomerular injury in Dahl salt-sensitive rats. 142 16
Jumper ant venom was prepared by extraction of venom sacs in distilled
water
and centrifugation to remove insoluble material. Jumper ant venom (2 micrograms/ml) produced a biphasic response on isolated guinea-pig ileum, i.e. an initial rapid contraction followed by a slower prolonged contraction. The histamine antagonist mepyramine (0.1 microM) inhibited the first phase of this response by greater than 90%. In the isolated rat stomach fundus strip (which is insensitive to histamine), jumper ant venom (6 micrograms/ml) produced only a single contraction. No tachyphylaxis was observed to repeated doses of jumper ant venom in guinea-pig ileum or rat fundus strip. Responses to jumper ant venom of the egg-albumin-sensitised guinea-pig ileum were not significantly different before and after an in vitro anaphylactic response induced by egg albumin (0.5 mg/ml). Fluorometric assay revealed a mean value of 0.9 +/- 0.2% of the dry weight as histamine in jumper ant venom. Both the lipoxygenase/cyclo-oxygenase inhibitor BW755C and the cyclooxygenase inhibitor indomethacin significantly inhibited the second phase response to jumper ant venom of the guinea-pig ileum, and the response of the rat fundus strip. The muscarinic receptor antagonist atropine (0.1 microM), the bradykinin antagonist [Thi5,8,D-Phe7]-bradykinin (10 microM) and the
angiotensin converting enzyme
inhibitor captopril (20 microM) did not affect either phase of the venom response in guinea-pig ileum. Jumper ant venom caused haemolysis of guinea-pig blood. The degree of haemolysis was significantly reduced when boiled venom was used. These results suggest that jumper ant venom contains histamine and may cause the release of cyclo-oxygenase products. It also contains a heat-sensitive haemolytic factor.
...
PMID:Pharmacological studies of jumper ant (Myrmecia pilosula) venom: evidence for the presence of histamine, and haemolytic and eicosanoid-releasing factors. 144 Jun 45
Adriamycin induces proteinuria and glomerular changes in rats similar to those found in human focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS). Progression of this lesion may be slowed by use of
angiotensin converting enzyme
inhibition. To evaluate this we injected two groups of Sprague-Dawley rats with Adriamycin (2 intravenous doses of 2 mg/kg given at an interval of 3 weeks). One group of rats received enalapril (50 mg/l) in their drinking
water
. Control rats were injected with saline. After 28 weeks, the mean whole kidney glomerular filtration rate was significantly less and proteinuria and sclerotic index were significantly greater in rats receiving adriamycin compared with controls (P < 0.05). Administration of enalapril did not decrease proteinuria (545 +/- 398 mg/day vs 494 +/- 325 mg/day, P >0.05) or improve the glomerular filtration rate (0.31 +/- 0.18 ml/min per g kidney weight vs 0.41 +/- 0.21 ml/min per g, P = 0.27). However, treatment with enalapril significantly reduced the mean glomerular sclerotic index compared with untreated rats (1.62 +/- 0.88 vs 0.82 +/- 0.49, P = 0.05). Enalapril may be beneficial in preserving glomerular structure in this experimental model of FSGS.
...
PMID:Effects of enalapril on adriamycin-induced nephrosis. 145 25
Administration of single dose (175 mg/kg body wt) of amiodarone dissolved in
water
through gavage for 3 weeks damaged the lung and changed the content of lung lavage. Activities of bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL)
angiotensin converting enzyme
(
ACE
) and lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) increased significantly. Also, the protein and lactate content of the lavage fluid increased significantly over the control. The drug also produced marked changes in morphology of the lung of experimental animals.
...
PMID:Lung injury by amiodarone, an antiarrhythmic drug, in male rats. 145 40
Relative biological values (BV) of 36 feed phosphates were determined with female turkeys in bioassays of 21-day duration using three response criteria: weight gain, tibia ash percentage, and gain:feed ratio. Calcium phosphate, dibasic dihydrate (United States Pharmacopeia) was the reference standard. Nine mono-dicalcium phosphates (M-
DCP
, 21.0% phosphorus), 13 di-monocalcium phosphates (D-MCP, 18.5% phosphorus), and 14 defluorinated phosphates (DFP, 18.0% phosphorus) were evaluated. The average relative BV for M-
DCP
, D-MCP, and DFP samples were 97.6, 94.6, and 90.8%, respectively. Solubility of phosphates was determined by four recognized methods. The solvents were
water
, .4% HCl, 2.0% citric acid (CA), and neutral ammonium citrate (NAC).
Water
solubility of M-
DCP
samples was greater (67.5%) than that of D-MCP (38.8%) and DFP (8.9%) samples. Correlation of
water
solubility of phosphates to their relative BV was quite low, and
water
solubility was a poor indicator of BV. When .4% HCl was the solvent, correlation coefficients (r) were .55, .33, and .72 for M-
DCP
, D-MCP, and DFP, respectively. Based on these results and prediction equations, .4% HCl solubility would be inappropriate for estimating BV of M-
DCP
and D-MCP samples. Solubility of feed phosphates (mainly D-MCP and DFP) in 2.0% CA or NAC was positively correlated with BV; the r values were .87 to .95. Both of these solubility tests provided a good index of BV. However, it would seem inappropriate and risky to replace bioassays totally with these tests. Feed phosphate users could perform either the 2.0% CA or NAC solubility test easily as a screen for BV along with other quality control procedures (i.e., phosphorus, calcium, sodium, and fluoride determinations).
...
PMID:Correlation of biological value of feed phosphates with their solubility in water, dilute hydrogen chloride, dilute citric acid, and neutral ammonium citrate. 147 May 90
Electrolyte abnormalities are a frequent and potentially hazardous complication in patients with heart failure. This may be due to the pathophysiological alterations seen in the heart failure state leading to neurohumoral activation (stimulation of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system, sympathoadrenergic stimulation), and due to the complications of therapy with diuretics, cardiac glycosides or
ACE
inhibitors. Patients with heart failure may exhibit hyponatremia due to a decrease in
water
excretion, which may be related to the enhanced release of both angiotensin and vasopressin and can be exaggerated by diuretic therapy. Along with potassium and calcium, magnesium influences cardiovascular function. Magnesium and potassium deficiencies play an important role in the development of cardiac arrhythmias. Magnesium is essential for the maintenance of intracellular potassium concentration. Although there are conflicting data regarding the prevalence of hypomagnesemia in patients with chronic heart failure (the values range from 7-37%), multiple studies have documented lower magnesium concentrations in patients with heart failure than in normal controls. As magnesium and potassium are mainly intracellular ions, measurements in serum or plasma are of limited value to assess magnesium status. There was no correlation between the intracellular electrolyte content and the electrolyte levels in plasma, either for mononuclear cells or erythrocytes or for myocardial and skeletal muscle. Loop diuretics (e.g. furosemide) are supposed to cause a substantial loss of both magnesium and potassium in the plasma and intracellular space. The potassium-sparing diuretics amiloride and triamterene are reported to also exert magnesium-sparing effects. Recently,
ACE
inhibitors have been documented to have important magnesium-conserving actions, possibly via their effect on glomerular filtration. Hyperkalemia, secondary to the use of
ACE
inhibitors in patients with heart failure, is well documented. Digoxin directly limits the renal tubular reabsorption of magnesium, therefore increasing magnesium excretion. Low magnesium and potassium concentrations increase cardiac glycoside toxicity. In contrast, elevated levels of magnesium decrease the sensitivity of human myocardium to antiarrhythmogenic actions of cardiac glycosides, without affecting maximally developed tension. Moreover, magnesium increases binding affinity of cardiac glycosides to the receptor. The antiarrhythmic action of magnesium is suspected to be mediated by a reduced sensitivity to electrophysiological changes induced by Ca2+, thus indicating Ca2+ antagonistic properties of magnesium. Magnesium deficiency has also been implicated in sudden death, notably in patients with congestive heart failure. Therefore, when treating congestive heart failure, one must consider how to prevent depletion of electrolytes or how to replete potassium and magnesium in deficiency states.
...
PMID:Heart failure and electrolyte disturbances. 150 35
A questionnaire on the treatment of congestive heart failure was distributed to physicians in the medical departments of five hospitals in the Oslo area. The 117 (81%) respondents selected first, second and third line therapy in the treatment of mild, moderate and severe heart failure. Diuretics and restrictions on sodium/
water
dominated as first line therapy for mild heart failure; less than 5% suggested
ACE
-inhibitors or digitalis. Some differences in priorities were revealed for moderate and severe heart failure. The majority again suggested diuretics and restrictions on sodium/
water
, but 20% preferred
ACE
-inhibitors, which were also stated as second or third line therapy by 60% of the physicians. Less than 50% chose digitalis or nitrates as one of the three first therapies.
...
PMID:[Treatment of heart failure. A questionnaire among Norwegian hospital physicians]. 141 51
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