Roles played by 20-HETE, angiotensin II and endothelin in mediating the hypertension in aging female spontaneously hypertensive rats

This study aimed to determine the roles of three of the systems known to contribute to HT in animal studies: angiotensin II (ANG II; enalapril inhibitor), eicosanoids [1-aminobenzotriazole (1-ABT) inhibitor], and endothelin (ETA receptor antagonist), on blood pressure (BP) in three groups of female spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR), aged 18 mos (postmenopausal rat, PMR). After baseline telemetry BP, three drug periods were performed for 5 days each: single blockade (ABT or enalapril), double blockade (ABT+enalapril or enalapril+ABT), and triple blockade (all 3 drugs). Controls received no treatment until the third period when they received ETA receptor antagonist alone. Single drug blockade reduced BP in PMR to similar levels. Double blockade reduced mean arterial pressure more in ABT+enalapril rats than in the other group (enalapril+ABT). Triple drug blockade reduced BP to similar levels in both groups, but the BP remained ~110 mmHg. The data suggest that these three systems, ANG II, eicosanoids, and endothelin, contribute together and independently to BP control in old female SHR. However, other systems also contribute to the HT since the BP was not normalized, supporting the notion that HT in postmenopausal women may require complex multidrug therapy to be better controlled and that may require the development of additional drugs.
Source: AJP: Regulatory, Integrative and Comparative Physiology - Category: Physiology Authors: Tags: Hormones, Reproduction and Development Source Type: research