10 research outputs found

    Impaired effectiveness of nitric oxide-donors in resistance arteries of patients with arterial hypertension

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    Dilation of resistance arteries in response to infusion of nitric oxide donors is impaired in hypertensive patients and the degree of this impairment depends critically on the severity of arterial hypertension. The reduced effectiveness of nitric oxide appears to be independent of the class of nitric oxide donor and thus of the mode of intravascular nitric oxide generation. These findings are likely to have important implications not only for our understanding of the pathophysiological mechanisms of endothelial dysfunction but also for nitric oxide donor therapy in arterial hypertension

    За кадры. 1979. № 23 (2173)

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    Заинтересовать каждого / Л. ШикановОпрос - не помеха / А. Г. БакировВстреча с ветераном / А. КопаневВ погоне за тройкой. Репортаж с размышлениями / Ю. СтруковаНаша целина / В. АзаровПартийная организация в борьбе за формирование молодого специалиста / Л. Киселев, Ю. МельниковВыездная сессия Академии наук / Р. ГорскаяНачало перемен. Страницы истории. Томску - 375 лет / И. Т. Лозовский"Не могу без лыж" / Г. ВенделеваВстреча в "Ладе" / Л. СкоробогатовКонденсатор информации. Советы библиографа / А. БарашковаМы и наши документы / Л. ПоздняковаЛёд весенний тонок, тонок... / Т. Сидоренк

    Direct biochemical evidence for eNOS stimulation by bradykinin in the human forearm vasculature

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    Objective: Although it has been shown recently that acetylcholine (ACh)-induced vasodilation of forearm resistance vessels is predominantly mediated by nitric oxide, direct biochemical evidence for eNOS stimulation by bradykinin (BK) in the human arterial circulation is still lacking. Therefore, the present study was designed to test the hypothesis that in the human forearm vasculature eNOS stimulation significantly contributes to BK-induced vasodilation. Methods: BK was infused in the presence and absence of the NOS inhibitor L-NMMA (8 ?mol/min) into the brachial artery of 16 healthy volunteers and the effects compared to muscarinergic eNOS stimulation following acetylcholine infusion. Forearm blood flow (FBF) was measured by venous occlusion plethysmography, and plasma nitrite (NO2 ?), which represents a sensitive and specific marker of regional eNOS activity, was determined in the antecubital vein and brachial artery by flow injection analysis. Nitric oxide production was calculated as product of the veno-arterial difference of NO2 ? concentration times FBF.Results: Kininergic (BK: 20, 60, 200 ng/min) as well as muscarinergic (ACh: 1, 3, 10 ?g/min) stimulation resulted in a dose-dependent increase in FBF and NO2 ? in each individual. The relationship between FBF and NO production upon BK infusion was comparable to that obtained with ACh (r = 0.98; n = 64, p < 0.01). Moreover, NOS inhibition reduced both flow responses and NO production (BK: 54 and 75 %; ACh: 57 and 72 %) to a similar extent. Conclusions: These data provide direct biochemical evidence for the involvement of eNOS in bradykinin-induced vasodilation of forearm resistance vessels in humans

    Plasma nitrosothiols contribute to the systemic vasodilator effects of intravenously applied NO: experimental and clinical Study on the fate of NO in human blood

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    Higher doses of inhaled NO exert effects beyond the pulmonary circulation. How such extrapulmonary effects can be reconciled with the presumed short half-life of NO in the blood is unclear. Whereas erythrocytes have been suggested to participate in NO transport, the exact role of plasma in NO delivery in humans is not clear. Therefore, we investigated potential routes of NO decomposition and transport in human plasma. NO consumption in plasma was accompanied by a concentration-dependent increase in nitrite and S-nitrosothiols (RSNOs), with no apparent saturation limit up to 200 micro mol/L. The presence of red blood cells reduced the formation of plasma RSNOs. Intravenous infusion of 30 micro mol/min NO in healthy volunteers increased plasma levels of RSNOs and induced systemic hemodynamic effects at the level of both conduit and resistance vessels, as reflected by dilator responses in the brachial artery and forearm microvasculature. Intravenous application of S-nitrosoglutathione, a potential carrier of bioactive NO, mimicked the vascular effects of NO, whereas nitrite and nitrate were inactive. Changes in plasma nitrosothiols were correlated with vasodilator effects after intravenous application of S-nitrosoglutathione and NO. These findings demonstrate that in humans the pharmacological delivery of NO solutions results in the transport and delivery of NO as RSNOs along the vascular tree

    Evidence for in vivo transport of bioactive nitric oxide in human plasma

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    Although hitherto considered as a strictly locally acting vasodilator, results from recent clinical studies with inhaled nitric oxide (NO) indicate that NO can exert effects beyond the pulmonary circulation. We therefore sought to investigate potential remote vascular effects of intra-arterially applied aqueous NO solution and to identify the mechanisms involved. On bolus application of NO into the brachial artery of 32 healthy volunteers, both diameter of the downstream radial artery and forearm blood flow increased in a dose-dependent manner. Maximum dilator responses were comparable to those after stimulation of endogenous NO formation with acetylcholine and bradykinin. Response kinetics and pattern of NO decomposition suggested that despite the presence of hemoglobin-containing erythrocytes, a significant portion of NO was transported in its unbound form. Infusion of NO (36 μmol/min) into the brachial artery increased levels of plasma nitroso species, nitrite, and nitrate in the draining antecubital vein (by < 2-fold, 30-fold, and 4-fold, respectively), indicative of oxidative and nitrosative chemistry. Infused N-oxides were inactive as vasodilators whereas S-nitrosoglutathione dilated conduit and resistance arteries. Our results suggest that NO can be transported in bioactive form for significant distances along the vascular bed. Both free NO and plasma nitroso species contribute to the dilation of the downstream vasculature
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