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Spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR) begin to die from cardiovascular complications at approximately 15 months of age. We tested whether chronic ACE-inhibitor treatment would extend the lifespan of such old animals. We also studied cardiac hypertrophy and function, endothelial function and expression, and activity of NO synthase (eNOS). One hundred 15-month-old SHR were randomized into 3 groups, control (n=10), placebo-treated (n=45), and ramipril-treated with an antihypertensive dose of 1 mg. kg(-1). d(-1) in drinking water (n=45). Ex vivo experiments were performed after 15 months (control) and 21 months, when approximately 80% of the placebo group had died. Late treatment with ramipril significantly extended lifespan of the animals from 21 to 30 months. Fully established cardiac hypertrophy, observed in placebo-treated animals and in controls, was significantly reversed by ramipril treatment. In isolated working hearts, a significantly improved function associated with increased cardiac eNOS expression was seen versus placebo and control hearts. Endothelial dysfunction in isolated aortic rings from control and placebo-treated SHR was significantly improved by ACE inhibition and associated with enhanced NO release. Late treatment of SHR with the ACE inhibitor ramipril extended lifespan from 21 to 30 months, which is comparable to the lifespan of untreated normotensive Wistar-Kyoto rats. This lifespan extension, probably due to blood pressure reduction, correlated with increased eNOS expression and activity followed by a regression of left ventricular hypertrophy and cardiac and vascular dysfunction.

online pharmacy ref source: www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&list_uids=10454456&dopt=Abstract




Vasa. 1999 Aug;28(3):172-80.
Influence of ramipril on the course of plasma thrombomodulin in patients with diabetes mellitus.

Borcea V, Morcos M, Isermann B, Henkels M, Ziegler S, Zumbach M, Amiral J, Langst KD, Seiz W, Ziegler R, Wahl P, Nawroth PP.

Department of Internal Medicine I, University of Heidelberg, Germany.

BACKGROUND: In diabetic patients endothelial dysfunction is reflected by an increased urinary albumine excretion, which can be reduced by ACE-inhibitors. No data are available showing a endothelial-protective effect by determining a marker reflecting endothelial cell-damage. PATIENTS AND METHODS: The effect of angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor (ACEI) (ramipril) treatment on the progression of endothelial cell damage,--assessed by measurement of plasma-thrombomodulin (TM),--was investigated in an open, non randomized, prospective pilot study over a period of 18 months in diabetic patients. 87 patients with an urinary albumin concentration (UAC) below 100 mg/l at baseline were included. 46 patients were treated without ACEI and served as a control group, 41 patients were treated with ACEI. Participation in this study did not affect intensity in the treatment of blood glucose, blood pressure or diet. At study entry both groups were comparable with respect to duration of diabetes, diabetic complications, vascular risk factors, body mass index, medications used to treat diabetes, presence of hypertension, glycemic control, tryglycerides, HDL cholesterol, creatinine, UAC and plasma-TM. Age, blood pressure, and total cholesterol were significantly higher in the ACEI group, compared with the control group. RESULTS: After a follow up of 18 months a significant increase in UAC (delta UAC = 10.48 mg/l, p = 0.03) and plasma-TM (delta TM = 3.06 ng/l, p = 0.009) was observed in the control group, while in the ACEI treated group a decrease in albuminuria (delta UAC = -7.44 mg/l, p = 0.01) and plasma-TM (delta TM = -4.78 ng/l, p = 0.001) was seen. Despite a similar approach in hypertension and diabetes control in both groups, UAC and plasma-TM decreased after 18 months only in the ACEI treated group. Treatment with ACEI was the strongest predictor (p = 0.0001) indicating decrease of UAC and plasma-TM (multi regression analysis). CONCLUSION: Plasma-thrombomodulin might be a useful marker for assessing the efficacy of drugs potentially protecting the vessel wall. While the present study was a open, non randomized study, further investigation is necessary to proof the hypothesis in a randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind study.

online pharmacy ref source: www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&list_uids=10483322&dopt=Abstract




J Cardiovasc Pharmacol. 1999 Oct;34(4):547-53.
Absence of nitrate tolerance after long-term treatment with ramipril: an endothelium-dependent mechanism.

Berkenboom G, Fontaine D, Unger P, Baldassarre S, Preumont N, Fontaine J.

Department of Cardiology, Erasme Hospital, Brussels, Belgium.

To determine whether nitrate tolerance is attenuated on aortas isolated from rats treated in the long term with an angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitor, five groups of rats were studied in parallel. Group 1 received ramipril, 1 mg/ kg/day, p.o., for 6 weeks; group 2 received ramipril at the same dose for 4 weeks, and the last 2 weeks, a cotreatment with ramipril plus HOE 140 (a bradykinin B2 antagonist, 500 microg/ kg/day, s.c. injections); group 3 received losartan, 2 mg/kg/day, p.o., for 6 weeks; group 4 received losartan at the same dose, and the last 2 weeks, a cotreatment with losartan plus HOE 140; and group 5 served as control. Rings of thoracic aorta from these groups were studied in organ baths. After nitroglycerin preincubation (10 microM for 30 min) in vitro, the dose-response curves to nitroglycerin were significantly shifted to the right in the control group but not in group 1. This protective effect was partially present in group 3; it was completely abolished in groups 2 and 4. In groups 1 and 3, it also was abolished after nitric oxide synthase (cNOS) inhibition (L-NMMA incubation) or removal of the endothelium. Superoxide anion accumulation (assessed by lucigenin chemiluminescence) was increased by nitroglycerin incubation in the control group but not in groups 1 and 3. After in vivo exposure to nitroglycerin (50 mg/kg subcutaneously twice daily for 4 days), this protection against nitrate tolerance also was observed in groups 1 and 3. Thus long-term ACE inhibition prevents nitrate tolerance by an endothelium-dependent mechanism involving mainly an enhanced NO availability via B2-kinin receptor. This effect on the cNOS pathway seems to attenuate the superoxide anion accumulation induced by nitroglycerin exposure (probably via a downregulation of oxidative enzyme).

online pharmacy ref source: www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&list_uids=10511130&dopt=Abstract













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