Madeddu P, Yang X P, Anania V, Troffa C, Pazzola A, Soro A, Manunta P, Tonolo G, Demontis M P, Varoni M V
Clinica Medica and Farmacologia, University of Sassari, Italy.
Am J Physiol. 1990 Aug;259(2 Pt 2):F304-11. doi: 10.1152/ajprenal.1990.259.2.F304.
We investigated whether systemic and renal vasoconstriction induced by porcine endothelin (endothelin 1) is prevented by nifedipine in awake normotensive rats. Endothelin (0.07-1.4 nmol/kg iv) induced a long-lasting increase in mean blood pressure (MBP) and a decrease in renal blood flow (RBF). Maximal decrease in RBF was 25 +/- 7% (0.07 nmol/kg), 40 +/- 2 (0.35), 67 +/- 5 (0.70), and 74 +/- 8 (1.4). Hemodynamic parameters were back to base line within 35 +/- 5 min (0.07 nmol/kg), 43 +/- 6 (0.35), 60 +/- 4 (0.70), and 81 +/- 7 (1.4). Intravenous bolus injection of either angiotensin II (ANG II, 0.006-0.024 nmol/kg) or norepinephrine (0.40-1.60 nmol/kg) caused a dose-related short-lasting increase in MBP and a decrease in RBF. Endothelin was less potent than ANG II (1:3.42) and more potent than norepinephrine (1:0.015) as a renal vasoconstrictor. Nifedipine (1 mg/kg ip) was equally effective in preventing the increase in MBP caused by endothelin, norepinephrine, or ANG II. It exerted a weaker protection on the renal hemodynamic response to endothelin compared with the inhibition of the other two vasoconstrictors. Thus the regression line representing the relationship between endothelin-induced changes in MBP and RBF was steeper in rats given nifedipine (slope: vehicle, -1.33; nifedipine, -5.50; P less than 0.05). These studies suggest that nifedipine can partially prevent systemic and renal vasoconstriction caused by exogenously administered endothelin in awake normotensive rats.