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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (
hypertension
)
170,190
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The purpose of these experiments was to compare the effects of endopeptidase inhibition with oral candoxatril on systemic and forearm hemodynamics and muscle sympathetic nerve activity with responses to a low-dose atrial natriuretic factor infusion. Eleven healthy men received at random on three separate days either intravenous saline, natriuretic factor (1.6 pmol/kg per minute) plus saline, or oral candoxatril (200 mg) plus saline. Measurements were made at baseline and 30, 60, and 90 minutes after interventions. Atrial natriuretic factor lowered diastolic pressure (P < .01), central venous pressure (P < .001), forearm blood flow (P < .05), and forearm vascular compliance (P < .05) but had no effect on systolic pressure, heart rate or its variability, stroke volume, sympathetic nerve activity, plasma norepinephrine, or endothelin-1. Plasma epinephrine increased (P < .01).
Candoxatril
lowered central venous pressure (P < .001) and increased systolic pressure (from 116 +/- 6 to 120 +/- 7 mm Hg; P < .05), endothelin (from 4.6 +/- 1.1 to 6.8 +/- 3.2 pmol/L; P < .02), and epinephrine (P < .05), without affecting any other variables.
Candoxatril
and atrial natriuretic factor lowered central venous pressure in healthy men without causing a reflex increase in sympathetic nerve activity or norepinephrine, yet epinephrine rose. This suggests that both interventions may specifically inhibit sympathetic nerve traffic to muscle at physiological plasma atrial natriuretic factor concentrations. However, whereas the peptide lowered blood pressure, candoxatril increased systolic pressure. These contrasting hemodynamic responses may be related to differences in plasma atrial natriuretic peptide concentration and to altered endothelin metabolism by candoxatril.
Hypertension
1995 Dec
PMID:Comparison of candoxatril and atrial natriuretic factor in healthy men. Effects on hemodynamics, sympathetic activity, heart rate variability, and endothelin. 749 88
These studies examined the interactions of neutral endopeptidase (NEP), endothelin-1 (ET-1), and nitric oxide (NO) in deoxycorticosterone acetate (DOCA)-induced
hypertension
. Male Sprague-Dawley rats (n = 35) were uninephrectomized (UNx) or uninephrectomized and treated with DOCA (25 mg pellet implanted subcutaneously).
Candoxatril
(30 mg/kg day(-1)), a NEP inhibitor, was given orally for 3 weeks in UNx or DOCA rats. Sham nephrectomized rats (SHAM) served as controls. Except SHAM, all other groups received 1% NaCl in drinking water ad libitum. Measurements were taken of systolic blood pressure (SBP), left ventricle (LV), and aortic weight (AW), plasma ET-1, and urinary excretion of nitrite and Na+. Whole body vascular hypertrophy and morphometric analysis of histological sections of the heart were also determined. In DOCA rats, SBP increased from 113 +/- 5 to 170 +/- 5 mmHg without significant changes in body weight (BW).
Candoxatril
reduced the increase in SBP to 135 +/- 9 mmHg (P < 0.05), abolished the increased LV wall thickness (P < 0.05), and increased the reduced LV lumen diameter (P < 0.05) in DOCA-salt rats.
Candoxatril
also reduced plasma ET-1 by 88 +/- 9% and 89 +/- 17% (P < 0.05) in UNx and DOCA rats, respectively, and elicited increases in urinary excretion of nitrite. These effects were accompanied by a marked increase in urinary excretion of Na+ (U(Na)V) (P < 0.05) and a blunting of the proteinuria (32 +/- 5%; P < 0.05) in DOCA rats. We conclude that endopeptidase inhibition in DOCA-salt
hypertension
reduced the increase in blood pressure and the attendant tissue hypertrophy and renal injury. These effects suggest a correlation between endopeptidase-related reduction in ET-1 production and protection in DOCA-salt
hypertension
.
...
PMID:Chronic endopeptidase inhibition in DOCA-salt hypertension: mechanism of cardiovascular protection. 1294 Apr 71