(Circulation. 1997;96:3626-3632.)
© 1997 American Heart Association, Inc.
Articles |
From the Vascular Research Laboratory, Cardiology Division, University of California, San Francisco.
Correspondence to Dr K. Sudhir, Box 0124, University of California, 505 Parnassus Ave, San Francisco, CA 94143. E-mail sudhir{at}cardio.ucsf.edu
Background Estrogens are cardioprotective hormones and are reported to have antianginal properties. We examined the effect of physiological concentrations of 17ß-estradiol on coronary reactivity in anesthetized female farm pigs.
Methods and Results Epicardial coronary cross-sectional area (CSA) was assessed by two-dimensional intravascular ultrasound, average coronary peak flow velocity (APV) by intravascular Doppler velocimetry, and coronary blood flow (CBF) was calculated. Dose-response curves to intracoronary endothelin-1 (ET-1, 1 pmol/L to 10 nmol/L), the selective ETB receptor agonist sarafotoxin (1 pmol/L to 10 nmol/L), and serotonin (0.1 nmol/L to 1 µmol/L) were assessed before and after a 10-minute infusion of intracoronary estradiol (1 nmol/L). Before estradiol administration, ET-1 induced significant dose-dependent decreases in CSA, APV, and CBF. Estradiol attenuated ET-1induced epicardial vasoconstriction (P<.001) as well as ET-1induced decreases in APV (P=.05) and CBF (P=.012). In an additional five pigs, vehicle (DMSO) had no effect on ET-1induced coronary vasoconstriction. Before estradiol administration, sarafotoxin induced no net change in CSA but induced increases in APV and CBF, the extent of which did not change significantly after estradiol. Serotonin induced small decreases in CSA but increased APV and CBF. Estradiol did not influence serotonin-induced changes in CSA, APV, or CBF.
Conclusions We conclude that estradiol attenuates ET-1induced vasoconstriction, possibly through effects on the ETA receptor, because selective ETB receptor-induced stimulation with sarafotoxin remained unchanged. Such an effect on the ETA receptor may relate to the antianginal properties of estrogens.
Key Words: hormones endothelin blood flow angina
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