| Literature DB >> 8982513 |
C Richer1, H Boulanger, S Es-Slami, J F Giudicelli.
Abstract
1. In pregnant rats, chronic NO-synthase inhibition induces the development of a pre-eclamptic syndrome, characterized by an increase in maternal blood pressure, a loss of vascular refractoriness to pressor stimuli, a reduction in litter size and a decrease in pups (and maternal) weight. We investigated whether a NO-donor, molsidomine, administered during NO synthase inhibition, could restore a normal pregnancy. 2. Pregnant rats were given daily, starting from day 14 of gestation, saline (controls), or L-NAME (50 mg kg-1 d-1), or molsidomine (15 or 30 mg kg-1 d-1), or the L-NAME + molsidomine combinations. Maternal blood pressure and body weight, litter size, pups weight and vascular reactivity to pressor stimuli (angiotensin II, noradrenaline, electrical stimulation of the spinal cord) were investigated. 3. L-NAME alone, as compared to controls, increased maternal blood pressure, reduced litter size (-59%), increased foetal reabsorptions (+ 625%) and decreased foetal weight (-10%). Vascular reactivity to pressor stimuli was enhanced. 4. Molsidomine alone, as compared to controls, dose-dependently decreased maternal blood pressure but had no effect vascular reactivity and, whatever the dose, on foetal outcome. 5. The L-NAME-molsidomine combinations dose (of molsidomine)-dependently limited the rise in maternal blood pressure induced by L-NAME alone but unexpectedly, dose-dependently and significantly worsened pregnancy evolution, e.g., at 30 mg kg-1 d-1: litter size (-80%), foetal reabsorptions (+ 1025%), foetal weight (-24%). Vascular reactivity to pressor stimuli was paradoxically further enhanced. 6. Thus, in a chronic NO deprivation-induced model of pre-eclampsia in rats, molsidomine, possibly because of its hypotensive action, worsens the foetal outcome, which questions the usefulness of NO-donors in pre-eclamptic women.Entities:
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Year: 1996 PMID: 8982513 PMCID: PMC1915795 DOI: 10.1111/j.1476-5381.1996.tb16084.x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Pharmacol ISSN: 0007-1188 Impact factor: 8.739