| Literature DB >> 10642383 |
S Doi1, N Smedira, P A Murray.
Abstract
We tested the hypothesis that regulation of the pulmonary circulation by endogenous endothelin (ET) during normoxia and hypoxia was altered in conscious dogs 1 mo after left lung autotransplantation (LLA). Sham-operated control and post-LLA dogs were chronically instrumented to measure the left pulmonary vascular pressure-flow (LP-Q) relationship. LP-Q plots were generated on separate days during normoxia and hypoxia (arterial PO(2) approximately 50 Torr) in the intact condition, after selective ET(A)-receptor inhibition (BQ-485), and after combined ET(A+B)-receptor inhibition (bosentan). Although LLA resulted in a chronic increase in pulmonary vascular resistance, the ET-receptor antagonists had no effect on the LP-Q relationship during normoxia in either group. The magnitude of hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction (HPV) was flow dependent in both groups, and the HPV response was potentiated post-LLA compared with control. ET(A)-receptor inhibition attenuated the HPV response to the same extent in both groups. ET(A+B)-receptor inhibition attenuated the HPV response to a greater extent than did ET(A)-receptor inhibition alone, and this effect was greater post-LLA compared with control. Plasma ET-1 concentration only increased during hypoxia in the LLA group. These results indicate that ET does not regulate the baseline LP-Q relationship in either group. Both ET(A)- and ET(B)-receptor activation mediate a component of HPV in conscious dogs, and the vasoconstrictor influence of ET(B)-receptor activation is enhanced post-LLA.Entities:
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Year: 2000 PMID: 10642383 DOI: 10.1152/jappl.2000.88.1.210
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Appl Physiol (1985) ISSN: 0161-7567