Artículos de revistas
Sildenafil Preserves Diastolic Relaxation After Reduction By L-name And Increases Phosphodiesterase-5 In The Intercalated Discs Of Cardiac Myocytes And Arterioles.
Registro en:
Clinics (são Paulo, Brazil). v. 66, n. 7, p. 1253-8, 2011.
1980-5322
21876983
Autor
Ferreira-Melo, Silvia Elaine
Demacq, Caroline
Lacchini, Silvia
Krieger, José Eduardo
Irigoyen, Maria Cláudia
Moreno, Heitor
Institución
Resumen
We investigated the influence of sildenafil on cardiac contractility and diastolic relaxation and examined the distribution of phosphodiesterase-5 in the hearts of hypertensive rats that were treated with by NG-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME). Male Wistar rats were treated with L-NAME and/or sildenafil for eight weeks. The Langendorff method was used to examine the effects of sildenafil on cardiac contractility and diastolic relaxation. The presence and location of phosphodiesterase-5 and phosphodiesterase-3 were assessed by immunohistochemistry, and cGMP plasma levels were measured by ELISA. In isolated hearts, sildenafil prevented the reduction of diastolic relaxation (dP/dt) that was induced by L-NAME. In addition, phosphodiesterase-5 immunoreactivity was localized in the intercalated discs between the myocardial cells. The staining intensity was reduced by L-NAME, and sildenafil treatment abolished this reduction. Consistent with these results, the plasma levels of cGMP were decreased in the L-NAME-treated rats but not in rats that were treated with L-NAME + sildenafil. The sildenafil-induced attenuation of the deleterious hemodynamic and cardiac morphological effects of L-NAME in cardiac myocytes is mediated (at least in part) by the inhibition of phosphodiesterase-5. 66 1253-8