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The effect of diabetes and sex on nitric oxide-mediated cardiovascular dynamics
Authors:Martínez-Nieves B  Dunbar J C
Institution:Department of Physiology, Wayne State University School of Medicine, Detroit, Michigan 48201, USA.
Abstract:Diabetes is associated with impaired cardiovascular responses that are especially prominent in females. Since nitric oxide (NO)-mediated effects on cardiovascular dynamics are altered in diabetes, we evaluated the effect of L-NAME, a nitric oxide synthase (NOS) antagonist, on mean arterial pressure (MAP), heart rate (HR), and selective vascular flows in both male and female normal and diabetic rats as an index of NO activity. Rats were made diabetic using streptozotocin and maintained for 5-6 weeks. Following anesthesia with urethane/alpha-chloralose, the femoral artery and vein were cannulated for recording and sampling, and flow probes were placed on the iliac, renal, and superior mesenteric arteries. A bolus infusion of L-NAME (10mg/ kg) resulted in a rapid +52% and +68% increase in MAP in normal female and male rats, respectively. However, diabetic females' and males' responses were significantly lower (44% and 45%, respectively) when compared with their normal counterparts. The decreased HR in response to the peak pressor effect of L-NAME was more prominent in normal females compared with normal males (-14% vs 2%). The results in diabetic females and males were equivalent (-6% vs -9%, respectively). L-NAME decreased the conductance (flow/MAP) an average of 65% in all three vascular beds in normal female rats. In diabetic females, the iliac and superior mesenteric responses to L-NAME were less, and the renal conductance was contrastingly increased 23%. The response to L-NAME was comparable (-62%) in the renal and superior mesenteric and less (-40%) in the iliacs of normal versus diabetic males. We concluded that diabetes is associated with a decreased pressor response to NOS inhibition. And the impaired constriction response of the renal vessels noted in female diabetic rats may provide a basis for the increased renal pathology observed in diabetic humans.
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