Circulation, Vol 89, 2260-2265, Copyright © 1994 by American Heart Association
YP Sun, BQ Zhu, RE Sievers, SA Glantz and WW Parmley
BACKGROUND: We previously demonstrated that exposure to environmental
tobacco smoke (ETS) increases the development of atherosclerosis in
lipid-fed rabbits. Clinical studies have suggested a protective effect of
beta-blockers in smokers. Accordingly, we evaluated the effects of
metoprolol in this animal model to see whether this beta-blocker would
block the atherogenic effects of ETS. METHODS AND RESULTS: Thirty-two New
Zealand White male rabbits on a 0.3% cholesterol diet were randomly divided
into four groups: ETS-metoprolol (ETS-M), ETS-control (ETS-C), and non-ETS
with metoprolol (NETS-M) and without metoprolol (NETS-C). The two
metoprolol-treated groups received metoprolol at a dose of 0.4 mg.kg-1.h-1
administered subcutaneously by an osmotic pump. Rabbits in the ETS groups
were exposed to sidestream smoke from four Marlboro cigarettes per 15
minutes, 6 hours a day, for 10 weeks. Average air carbon monoxide (CO),
nicotine, and total particulates (TP) in the exposure chambers were 67.2
+/- 3.1 (SEM) ppm, 1133.7 +/- 78.4 micrograms/m3, and 37.7 +/- 3.0 mg/m3,
respectively. Plasma nicotine was significantly higher in ETS-exposed
rabbits than in nonexposed rabbits (7.1 +/- 1.9 versus 0.5 +/- 0.1 ng/mL, P
< .01). Blood carbon monoxide hemoglobin (COHb) in the ETS-M group was
significantly higher than that in the NETS-M group (4.0 +/- 0.2% versus 1.3
+/- 0.1%, P < .0001). The lipid lesions in the aorta and pulmonary
artery were 57.2 +/- 7.6% and 33.1 +/- 6.4% (ETS-M), 62.8 +/- 8.4% and 58.4
+/- 6.1% (ETS-C), 38.7 +/- 9.4% and 24.8 +/- 7.7% (NETS-M), and 49.8 +/-
8.7% and 32.7 +/- 7.1% (NETS-C). There were significant differences in
lipid deposits of the arteries between the controls and the ETS-exposed
rabbits (37 +/- 1% versus 53 +/- 1%, P = .004) and between the controls and
metoprolol-treated rabbits (51 +/- 1% versus 38 +/- 1%, P = .027). The
benefit of metoprolol was independent of ETS exposure (ETS x metoprolol
interaction, P = .595). CONCLUSIONS: Exposure to ETS significantly
accelerated and metoprolol decreased the development of atherosclerosis in
lipid-fed rabbits, but there was no interaction between the effects of ETS
exposure and metoprolol. Metoprolol did not protect against the effects of
ETS on atherosclerosis, suggesting that the beta-adrenergic system is not
the mechanism of ETS-induced atherosclerosis.
ARTICLES
Metoprolol does not attenuate atherosclerosis in lipid-fed rabbits exposed to environmental tobacco smoke
Department of Medicine, University of California, San Francisco 94143- 0124.
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