[HTML][HTML] Abnormal endothelium-dependent vascular relaxation in patients with essential hypertension

JA Panza, AA Quyyumi, JE Brush Jr… - New England Journal …, 1990 - Mass Medical Soc
JA Panza, AA Quyyumi, JE Brush Jr, SE Epstein
New England Journal of Medicine, 1990Mass Medical Soc
Background. Endothelium regulates vascular tone by influencing the contractile activity of
vascular smooth muscle. This regulatory effect of the endothelium on blood vessels has
been shown to be impaired in atherosclerotic arteries in humans and animals and in animal
models of hypertension. Methods. To determine whether patients with essential
hypertension have an endothelium-dependent abnormality in vascular relaxation, we
studied the response of the forearm vasculature to acetylcholine (an endotheliumdependent …
Background
Endothelium regulates vascular tone by influencing the contractile activity of vascular smooth muscle. This regulatory effect of the endothelium on blood vessels has been shown to be impaired in atherosclerotic arteries in humans and animals and in animal models of hypertension.
Methods
To determine whether patients with essential hypertension have an endothelium-dependent abnormality in vascular relaxation, we studied the response of the forearm vasculature to acetylcholine (an endotheliumdependent vasodilator) and sodium nitroprusside (a direct dilator of smooth muscle) in 18 hypertensive patients (mean age[±SD], 50.7± 10 years; 10 men and 8 women) two weeks after the withdrawal of antihypertensive medications and in 18 normal controls (mean age, 49.9±9; 9 men and 9 women). The drugs were infused at increasing concentrations into the brachial artery, and the response in forearm blood flow was measured by strain-gauge plethysmography.
Results
The basal forearm blood flow was similar in the patients and controls (mean ±SD, 3.4±1.3 and 3.7±0.8 ml per minute per 100 ml of forearm tissue, respectively; P not significant). The responses of blood flow and vascular resistance to acetylcholine were significantly reduced in the hypertensive patients (P<0.0001); maximal forearm flow was 9.1 ±5 ml per minute per 100 ml in the patients and 20.0±8 ml per minute per 100 ml in the controls (P<0.0002). However, there were no significant differences between groups in the responses of blood flow and vascular resistance to sodium nitroprusside. Because the vasodilator effect of acetylcholine might also be due to presynaptic inhibition of the release of norepinephrine by adrenergic nerve terminals, the effect of acetylcholine was assessed during phentolamine-induced α-adrenergic blockade. Under these conditions, it was also evident that the responses to acetylcholine were significantly blunted in the hypertensive patients (P<0.03).
Conclusions
Endothelium-mediated vasodilation is impaired in patients with essential hypertension. This defect may play an important part in the functional abnormalities of resistance vessels that are observed in hypertensive patients. (N Engl J Med 1990; 323:22–7.)
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