Artigo
Role of membrane potential and expression of endothelial factors in Restenosis after angioplasty in SHR
Fecha
2004-01-01Registro en:
Hypertension. Philadelphia: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, v. 43, n. 1, p. 131-135, 2004.
0194-911X
10.1161/01.HYP.0000105300.74809.4F
WOS:000187567300020
Autor
Dina, Janaina Pereira [UNIFESP]
Feres, Teresa [UNIFESP]
Paiva, Antonio Cechelli de Mattos [UNIFESP]
Paiva, Therezinha Bandiera [UNIFESP]
Institución
Resumen
We examined the roles played by impaired K+ channels, diminished nitric oxide (NO) production, endothelin release, and smooth muscle membrane potential in the increased restenosis observed in spontaneously hypertensive rat (SHR) carotid arteries after angioplasty. the SHR carotid was found to be less polarized than that of normotensive Wistar rats (NWR), and it was further depolarized by the alpha(2) agonist UK 14,304. This response was blocked by iberiotoxin, indicating that calcium-dependent K+ channels operate normally in the SHR carotid. Acetylcholine caused a hyperpolarization that was significantly smaller in SHR than in NWR carotids, indicating a deficient release of NO in the SHR. After angioplasty, SHR and NWR vessels were depolarized, returning to baseline after 10 days. in the SHR but not in the NWR the contralateral carotid was also depolarized, and this was prevented by the endothelin A/B receptor antagonist bosentan. After angioplasty, endothelin-1 plasma levels increased in both SHR and NWR, but the increase was significantly more prolonged in SHR. We found that the more pronounced restenosis observed in the SHR carotid after angioplasty is not due to impairment of calcium-dependent K+ channels but is related to the relatively depolarized vascular smooth muscles, involving endothelin release caused by reduced NO levels in that strain.