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Division of Cardiology, Department of Medicine, University of Minnesota Medical School, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55455
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ABSTRACT |
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Sildenafil, a selective inhibitor of phosphodiesterase type 5, produces relaxation of isolated epicardial coronary artery segments by causing accumulation of cGMP. Because shear-induced nitric oxide-dependent vasodilation is mediated by cGMP, this study was performed to determine whether sildenafil would augment the coronary resistance vessel dilation that occurs during the high-flow states of exercise or reactive hyperemia. In chronically instrumented dogs, sildenafil (2 mg/kg per os) augmented the vasodilator response to acetylcholine, with a leftward shift of the dose-response curve relating coronary flow to acetylcholine dose. Sildenafil caused a 6.7 ± 2.1 mmHg decrease of mean aortic pressure, which was similar at rest and during treadmill exercise (P < 0.05), with no change of heart rate, left ventricular (LV) systolic pressure, or LV maximal first time derivative of LV pressure. Sildenafil tended to increase myocardial blood flow at rest and during exercise (mean increase = 14 ± 3%; P < 0.05 by ANOVA), but this was associated with a significant decrease in hemoglobin, so that the relationship between myocardial oxygen consumption and oxygen delivery to the myocardium (myocardial blood flow × arterial O2 content) was unchanged. Furthermore, sildenafil did not alter coronary venous PO2, indicating that the coupling between myocardial blood flow and myocardial oxygen demands was not altered. In addition, sildenafil did not alter the peak coronary flow rate, debt repayment, or duration of reactive hyperemia that followed a 10-s coronary occlusion. The findings suggest that cGMP-mediated resistance vessel dilation contributes little to the increase in myocardial flow that occurs during exercise or reactive hyperemia.
phosphodiesterase; guanosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate; myocardial oxygen consumption; blood flow
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INTRODUCTION |
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ENDOTHELIUM-DERIVED NITRIC OXIDE (NO) causes activation of soluble guanylyl cyclase in vascular smooth muscle. The resultant increase in cGMP and cGMP-dependent protein kinases causes vasodilation through modulation of calcium channels and by decreasing the calcium sensitivity of the vascular smooth muscle contractile proteins (24). The response to activation of guanylyl cyclase is terminated by several cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterases that inactivate cGMP. Phosphodiesterase type 5 (PDE5), which selectively degrades cGMP but does not catabolize cAMP (18, 36), has recently received increased attention because of the availability of sildenafil, a selective inhibitor of PDE5, for treatment of erectile dysfunction (5). PDE5 is found in high concentration in the corpus cavernosum; sildenafil increases cGMP levels and causes smooth muscle relaxation (5). PDE5 is also found in the vascular smooth muscle of epicardial coronary arteries (36). In isolated coronary artery segments, sildenafil has been reported to cause increased intracellular levels of cGMP and relaxation (36). However, the effect of sildenafil on coronary resistance vessels has not been reported. Because the increased coronary blood flow rates during exercise or reactive hyperemia would be expected to cause an increase of shear-mediated endothelial NO production, inhibition of PDE5 might amplify the coronary vasodilation associated with these high-flow states. Consequently, the purpose of this study was to determine whether PDE5 inhibition with sildenafil causes an increase of the coronary resistance vessel dilation, which occurs in response to exercise or during the reactive hyperemia after a brief coronary artery occlusion.
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METHODS |
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Studies were performed on seven adult mongrel dogs (20-26 kg/wt) trained to run on a motor-driven treadmill. All experiments were performed in accordance with the "Guiding Principles in the Care and Use of Laboratory Animals" as approved by the Council of the American Physiological Society and with prior approval of the Animal Care Committee of the University of Minnesota.
Surgical preparation. The dogs were anesthetized with pentobarbital sodium (30-35 mg/kg), intubated, and ventilated with a mixture of oxygen (30%) and room air (70%). Respiratory rate and tidal volume were set to keep arterial blood gases within the physiological range. A left thoracotomy was performed in the fifth intercostal space, and the heart was suspended in a pericardial cradle. A polyvinyl chloride catheter measuring 3.0 mm internal diameter (ID) filled with heparinized saline was inserted into the internal thoracic artery and advanced into the ascending aorta. A similar catheter was introduced into the left ventricle through the apex and secured in place. A solid-state micromanometer (model P5, Konigsberg Instruments, Pasadena, CA) was also introduced into the left ventricle at the apex. A final catheter was introduced into the right atrial appendage, manipulated into the coronary sinus ostium, and advanced into the great cardiac vein until the catheter tip could be palpitated within 1 cm of the interventricular sulcus. This method allowed selective sampling of coronary venous blood draining the myocardium perfused by the left anterior descending coronary artery (LAD). Approximately 1.5 cm of the proximal LAD was dissected free, and a Doppler velocity probe (Craig Hartley, Houston, TX) was positioned around the artery. Immediately distal to the velocity probe, a hydraulic occluder was placed around the vessel. A silicone catheter (0.3 mm ID) bonded to a larger silicone catheter (1.6 mm ID) was introduced into the LAD immediately distal to the hydraulic occluder. The pericardium was then loosely closed, and the catheters and electrical leads were tunneled subcutaneously to exit at the base of the neck. The chest was closed in layers, and the pneumothorax was evacuated. Catheters were flushed daily with heparinized saline. The catheters, electrical leads, and occluder tubing were protected with a nylon vest. Postoperative analgesia was provided with the use of butorphanol 0.4 mg/kg sc every 4-6 h.
Experimental protocol.
Studies were performed ~10 days after surgery for measurement of
systemic hemodynamics and coronary blood flow at rest and during
exercise before and after administration of sildenafil. When the dogs
stood quietly on the treadmill, resting hemodynamics and coronary blood
flow were recorded, and 2 ml of blood were withdrawn anaerobically from
the aortic and coronary venous catheters and maintained on ice until
blood gas analysis could be performed (within 30 min after sample
collection). Subsequently, a three-stage treadmill exercise protocol
was begun (stage 1: 4.8 km/h at 0% grade; stage
2: 6.4 km/h at 0% grade; and stage 3: 6.4 km/h at 10%
grade). Each exercise stage lasted 3 min. Left ventricular (LV) and
aortic pressures and coronary blood flow were measured continuously.
Aortic and coronary venous blood samples were withdrawn during the last
30 s of each exercise stage when hemodynamics had reached a steady
state. After the dogs were allowed a rest of a minimum of 20 min after
completion of exercise so that heart rate, aortic, and LV pressures had
returned to the preexercise resting control values, the reactive
hyperemic responses to coronary occlusions 10 s in duration were
recorded in duplicate; a 3-min interval was allowed between occlusions.
Subsequently, the dogs were given an oral dose (2 mg/kg) of sildenafil.
One hour after sildenafil administration, hemodynamic measurements and
coronary blood flow were recorded during resting conditions and the
three-stage exercise protocol was then repeated as described above.
After the dogs rested a minimum of 20 min after completion of exercise, we repeated the reactive hyperemic responses to coronary occlusions were repeated as described above. To ensure that exercise had no effect
on the reactive hyperemic response, the effect of sildenafil on
reactive hyperemia after 10-s coronary artery occlusions was examined
in three dogs on a separate day during which no exercise was performed.
In three dogs, the effect of sildenafil was also examined on the
reactive hyperemia after 5- and 20-s coronary artery occlusions. At the
conclusion of the study, 3 ml of blood were withdrawn from the aortic
catheter and immediately centrifuged at 3,000 rpm for 10 min at 4°C.
The plasma was frozen at
70°C for determination of sildenafil
concentration using high-performance liquid chromatography with mass
spectrometric detection (35).
Endothelium-dependent vasodilation. In six dogs the effect of sildenafil on endothelium-dependent NO-mediated vasodilation was examined. Hemodynamic measurements and coronary blood flow were obtained with the dogs standing quietly in a sling. The increases in coronary blood flow produced by intracoronary infusion of acetylcholine (3.75 to 75 µg/min) was observed. After completion of these measurements, we administered sildenafil as an oral dose of 2 mg/kg. Thirty minutes after drug administration, coronary blood flow responses to intracoronary infusions of acetylcholine (3.75 to 75 µg/min) were repeated.
Hemodynamic measurements. Aortic pressure was measured with a fluid-filled pressure transducer positioned at midchest level. LV pressure was measured with the micromanometer calibrated with the fluid-filled LV catheter. The first time derivative of LV pressure (dP/dt) was obtained via electrical differentiation of the LV pressure signal. Coronary blood velocity was measured with a Doppler flowmeter system (Craig Hartley). Data were recorded on an eight-channel direct-writing oscillograph (Coulbourn Instruments, Lehigh Valley, PA).
Myocardial oxygen consumption. The blood specimens were maintained in iced syringes until the dogs completed each exercise trial. Measurements of PO2, PCO2, and pH were then immediately performed with a blood gas analyzer (model 113, Instrumentation Laboratory, Lexington, MA). Hemoglobin content was determined by the cyanmethemoglobin method. Hemoglobin oxygen saturation was calculated from the blood PO2, pH, and temperature by use of the oxygen dissociation curve for canine blood. Blood oxygen content was computed as (hemoglobin × 1.34 × % O2 saturation) + (0.0031 × PO2). Oxygen consumption in the region of myocardium perfused by the LAD was calculated as the product of myocardial blood flow and the difference in oxygen content between aortic and coronary venous blood.
Data analysis.
Heart rate, LV and aortic pressures, and coronary velocity were
measured from the strip-chart recordings. In five of the dogs, the
coronary Doppler velocity was calibrated using an injection of 15-µm
diameter microspheres labeled with 141Ce, 51Cr,
or 95Nb (NEM, Boston, MA), while the coronary Doppler
signal was simultaneously recorded. At the conclusion of the study,
duplicate myocardial specimens were obtained from the region of LV
perfused by the anterior descending coronary artery for radioactive
counting and determination of blood flow per gram of myocardium as
previously described (15). A calibration factor calculated
as blood flow per gram of myocardium determined with microspheres per
coronary Doppler shift was then used to convert the coronary velocity
to blood flow per gram of myocardium throughout the study. In the remaining two dogs, coronary blood flow (Q) was computed from the
Doppler shift using the equation Q = 2.5 × f × d2, where f is the Doppler shift
(kHz) and d is the diameter of the coronary artery
(3). In these dogs, the mass of myocardium perfused by the
LAD was obtained by multiplying LV weight × 0.43, which has been
reported to represent the average fraction of LV perfused by the LAD
(31). Blood flow per gram of myocardium was then
determined as LAD coronary artery flow per LAD perfused myocardium.
Total LAD blood flow during reactive hyperemia was determined by
electrical integration of the Doppler velocity tracing. Reactive
hyperemia flows were calculated as follows: blood flow debt
(ml) = control blood flow rate (ml/s) × duration of
occlusion (s); excess reactive hyperemia flow (ml) = total flow
during reactive hyperemia (ml)
[control blood flow rate
(ml/s) × duration of reactive hyperemia (s)]; blood flow
debt repaid during reactive hyperemia = excess reactive hyperemia
flow (ml)/blood flow debt (ml). The duration of reactive hyperemia was
taken as the time from release of the coronary occlusion to the point
at which flow returned to within 5% of control.
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RESULTS |
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Systemic hemodynamics.
The hemodynamic responses to graded exercise during control conditions
and after administration of sildenafil are shown in Table
1. During control conditions exercise
caused significant increases in heart rate, LV systolic pressure, and
LV dP/dtmax. Mean aortic pressure was
significantly increased during exercise stage 3 compared
with resting conditions. After administration of sildenafil, resting
heart rate, LV systolic pressure, LV dP/dtmax and the rate-pressure product were unchanged. Two-way ANOVA testing for
the effect of sildenafil considering rest and all three exercise stages
simultaneously demonstrated that mean aortic pressure was significantly
less after sildenafil treatment; however, this difference was not
significant when rest and each exercise stage were tested individually
(Table 1). After sildenafil exercise caused significant increases in
heart rate, LV systolic pressure, LV dP/dtmax,
and the rate-pressure product that were not different from those during control conditions.
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Coronary hemodynamics.
Coronary responses to graded treadmill exercise during control
conditions and with sildenafil are shown in Table 1 and Fig. 1. Exercise caused significant increases
of myocardial blood flow and oxygen consumption and a significant
decrease in coronary venous oxygen tension. During control
conditions exercise caused a significant increase of hemoglobin
from 13.1 ± 0.7 g/dl at rest to 14.6 ± 0.5 g/dl during the
heaviest level of exercise (P < 0.05). Sildenafil
caused a significant decrease of hemoglobin at rest and during exercise
(P < 0.05 by two-way ANOVA), but did not interfere
with the normal increase of hemoglobin from rest to exercise
(hemoglobin after sildenafil increased from 12.5 ± 0.8 g/dl at
rest to 13.9 ± 0.6 g/dl during the heaviest level of exercise;
P < 0.05). Myocardial blood flow tended to be higher after sildenafil, and this achieved statistical significance when rest
and all three exercise stages were considered simultaneously by using
two-way ANOVA (mean increase = 0.26 ± 0.05 ml · min
1 · g
1;
P < 0.05). However, the slightly higher myocardial
blood flow rates after sildenafil were almost exactly matched by the
slightly lower hemoglobin, so that the relationship between coronary
oxygen delivery (myocardial blood flow × arterial oxygen content)
and myocardial oxygen consumption was unchanged by sildenafil (Fig. 2). Coronary venous oxygen tension was
not significantly altered by sildenafil (Fig.
3).
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Reactive hyperemia. During control conditions, a 10-s coronary occlusion was followed by a reactive hyperemia 40 ± 9.7 s in duration, during which a peak flow rate of 114 ± 9.7 ml/min was achieved, resulting in 424 ± 105% debt repayment. Sildenafil did not significantly alter debt repayment (361 ± 110%), the peak blood flow rate during reactive hyperemia (111 ± 9.6 ml/min), or the duration of reactive hyperemia (38 ± 9.8 s). In three dogs, in which reactive hyperemia after a 5-s coronary occlusion was examined on days when no exercise was performed, sildenafil also had no effect on the reactive hyperemia (control debt repayment = 322 ± 16%; debt repayment after sildenafil = 316 ± 24%). In three dogs, in which reactive hyperemia after a 10-s coronary occlusion was examined on days when no exercise was performed, sildenafil also had no effect on the reactive hyperemia (control debt repayment = 325 ± 19%; debt repayment after sildenafil = 307 ± 44%). In the three dogs in which 20-s coronary occlusions were performed, sildenafil did not alter the reactive hyperemia (control debt repayment = 305 ± 22%; debt repayment after sildenafil = 296 ± 18%).
Endothelium-dependent vasodilation.
Intracoronary infusions of acetylcholine in doses of 3.75 to 75 µg/min had no effect on blood pressure (105 ± 6.0 mmHg) or heart rate (117 ± 5.5 beats/min). During control conditions
coronary blood flow increased from 48.6 ± 4.4 ml/min at baseline
to 130 ± 10.6 ml/min during infusion of acetylcholine at a dose
of 75 µg/min (Fig. 4). Sildenafil did
not significantly change heart rate or mean arterial pressure. However,
the increase of coronary blood flow produced by intracoronary
acetylcholine after sildenafil was significantly augmented (Fig. 4).
Thus during control conditions an increase in coronary blood flow of 80 ml/min required a dose of acetylcholine of 61.2 µg/min, whereas after
sildenafil an 80 ml/min increase in coronary blood flow was produced by
a dose of acetylcholine of 11.3 µg/min.
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Sildenafil plasma levels. Plasma sildenafil levels ranged from 383 to 789 nM (mean = 547 ± 77 nM). Because sildenafil is 84% bound to canine plasma protein (35), this represents a mean plasma-free sildenafil concentration of 87.5 ± 12.4 nM.
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DISCUSSION |
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In this study, PDE5 inhibition with sildenafil augmented the endothelium-dependent coronary resistance vessel dilation produced by acetylcholine. After sildenafil, coronary blood flow was slightly higher at rest and during exercise, but this was associated with a slightly lower hemoglobin. Thus sildenafil produced no change in the relationship between myocardial oxygen availability and myocardial oxygen consumption, or in coronary venous oxygen tension. Furthermore, sildenafil did not augment the reactive hyperemia that followed a brief coronary artery occlusion. These findings indicate that inhibition of PDE5 augments coronary resistance vessel dilation produced by an endothelium-dependent NO-mediated agonist but does not augment the resistance vessel dilation that occurs during the increased endothelial shear associated with the high coronary blood flow rates of exercise or reactive hyperemia. The implications of these findings will be discussed below.
Effects of cGMP on coronary vasomotion.
NO and sildenafil act on a common cGMP signaling pathway; one has the
ability to increase cGMP synthesis and the other to elevate smooth
muscle cGMP levels by selectively blocking cGMP degradation. As a
result, the effect of PDE5 inhibition on coronary vessels might be
expected to mimic the effect of NO donors. Therefore, it is of interest
to review studies examining the effects of NO on the coronary
circulation. Previous investigators have demonstrated that stimulation
of endogenous coronary NO production (as with acetylcholine) (16,
20), intra-arterial infusion of authentic NO (8),
or administration of NO donors (11) resulted in
significant increases of coronary blood flow. Despite this evidence
that NO can cause vasodilation of coronary resistance vessels, NO
synthase inhibition with
NG-nitro-L-arginine
(L-NNA),
NG-monomethyl-L-arginine
(L-NMMA), or
NG-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester
(L-NAME) did not decrease coronary blood flow in
anesthetized (27) or awake (3, 4, 37) dogs,
indicating that NO is not critical for maintaining coronary flow during
basal conditions. This is in agreement with previous reports that
coronary NO production is undetectable in vivo during resting
conditions and that the cGMP content of unstimulated endothelial cells
studied in vitro is very low. However, coronary NO production has been
shown to increase during exercise, likely due to increased endothelial
shear (4) and sympathetic nervous system activation of
endothelial NO synthase (eNOS) by stimulation of endothelial
2- and
2-adrenoceptors (15).
Nevertheless, blockade of NO production with NO synthase inhibitors did
not impair the increase in coronary flow during treadmill exercise in
normal dogs (3, 4). Furthermore, the relation between
myocardial oxygen consumption and coronary flow was not altered by
L-NNA, indicating that inhibition of NO production did not
interfere with metabolic regulation of coronary vasomotor tone.
Similarly, in the present study, blockade of cGMP degradation with
sildenafil did not cause coronary resistance vessel dilation out of
proportion to myocardial oxygen requirements. The apparent discrepancy
between the demonstrated ability of NO to cause resistance vessel
dilation in the heart and the failure of either decreasing coronary
vascular cGMP levels by blocking NO synthesis or increasing cGMP levels
by inhibiting PDE5 to alter coronary flow relative to myocardial oxygen
demands may be explained by reciprocal vasomotor adjustments at several
levels in the coronary microcirculation.
-adrenergic-mediated splenic contraction
that expresses erythrocyte-rich blood from the spleen into the systemic
circulation (30). Nitroglycerin has been demonstrated to
cause splenic dilation in dogs, suggesting that cGMP exerts a relaxing
effect on splenic capsule smooth muscle (25). The
decreased hemoglobin observed after sildenafil in the present study is
compatible with splenic dilation and consequent trapping of circulating
erythrocytes in the spleen. The resultant decreased blood
oxygen-carrying capacity was associated with a reciprocal increase of
coronary blood flow, so that oxygen delivery to the myocardium remained
unchanged. These results indicate that sildenafil did not interfere
with normal metabolic vasoregulation by which myocardial blood flow is
maintained proportionate to myocardial oxygen needs. Because the human
spleen is noncontractile, it is likely that the effect of sildenafil on
hemoglobin would not occur in humans.
PDE isoenzymes in vascular smooth muscle. Previous studies using the PDE5 inhibitors zaprinast (23) or E4021 (29) demonstrated an increase in cGMP levels in isolated coronary artery segments and dose-dependent dilation of the large epicardial coronary arteries in awake pigs (1, 29). Similarly, Wallis and co-workers (36) reported that sildenafil resulted in a significant increase of cGMP concentration in isolated canine coronary artery segments in vitro. In the present study, PDE5 inhibition with sildenafil produced only a slight, although significant, augmentation of coronary resistance vessel dilation in response to exercise. Failure of sildenafil to produce a greater increase of myocardial blood flow may have been the result of alternate pathways for degradation of cGMP. In addition to PDE5, four other PDE enzymes have been identified in vascular smooth muscle (26, 36). Vascular smooth muscle cGMP-hydrolyzing activity is mainly due to PDE1, a calmodulin-dependent PDE, and PDE5, which is a calcium-calmodulin-independent cGMP-specific PDE (2). Of the total cGMP hydrolyzing activity, PDE1 constituted 73% in porcine and ~80% in bovine coronary artery (2), suggesting that PDE1 would play an important role in regulating cGMP levels. Vinpocetine, a selective inhibitor of PDE1, has been shown to cause concentration-dependent relaxation of isolated arterial vessel segments (13). Increased levels of cAMP in vascular smooth muscle can also cause vasodilation. cAMP hydrolyzing activity is mainly due to PDE4, a cAMP-specific PDE, and PDE3, a cGMP-inhibited PDE (more abundant than PDE4). Selective PDE3 inhibitors have been shown to produce concentration-dependent relaxation of isolated canine coronary artery segments (14). Increased cGMP activity has the potential to enhance the effects of cAMP by inhibiting PDE3 activity. However, Wallis et al. (36) reported that the increase in cGMP in vascular smooth muscle caused by sildenafil did not produce a change in cAMP. PDE4, the cAMP-specific PDE, is insensitive to cGMP. In contrast to PDE3, PDE4 inhibitors used alone caused only weak relaxation of blood vessels (21), suggesting that PDE4 is less important than PDE3 in regulating vasomotor tone under physiological conditions. PDE2 can hydrolyze both cAMP and cGMP but is present only in very small amounts in vascular smooth muscle. Sildenafil has a high affinity for PDE5 and a low affinity for the other PDE isoenzymes in vascular smooth muscle (36). Thus the IC50 for inhibition of human PDE1, PDE2, PDE3, PDE4, and PDE5 was (in nM) 280, 6,800, 16,200, 7,200, and 3.5, respectively, indicating that sildenafil is highly selective for PDE5 (36). The mean plasma-free sildenafil concentration of 87.5 ± 12.4 nM in the present study would have provided a high degree of blockade of PDE5 with relatively little inhibition of the other PDE isoenzymes. The modest effect of sildenafil on myocardial blood flow in the present study may have occurred because sildenafil inhibits principally PDE5, with much less effect on PDE1, which provides an alternate pathway for the degradation of cGMP.
Effect of sildenafil on reactive hyperemia. In the present study, sildenafil had no effect on the reactive hyperemia that followed a brief coronary occlusion. In contrast, in isolated guinea pig hearts (22), open-chest dogs (39), and awake dogs (3, 7), NO synthase inhibition with L-NNA (3), L-NMMA (39), or L-NAME (22) decreased total reactive hyperemia flow principally by attenuating the late phase of the hyperemia response. Despite this previous evidence that NO contributes to coronary reactive hyperemia, in the present study, sildenafil did not result in an increase of total reactive hyperemia flow, the peak flow rate, or the duration of reactive hyperemia. Failure of sildenafil to augment reactive hyperemia suggests that an alternate pathway, such as PDE 1, can effectively degrade cGMP after blockade of PDE 5 (36). Alternatively, it is possible that metabolic vasomotor adjustments at the arteriolar level are able to counter any increase in cGMP-mediated vasodilation of the coronary arteries.
Effect of NO and sildenafil on myocardial oxygen consumption. Several investigators have suggested that NO can contribute to regulation of myocardial oxygen consumption. Hintze and co-workers (4, 32) reported that blockade of NO production in vivo and in vitro (32) led to significant increases in myocardial and skeletal muscle oxygen consumption. Conversely, stimulating NO-endogenous production with bradykinin or ramiprilat, or administering an NO donor, resulted in decreases in oxygen consumption in primate myocardial tissue (12). However, studies from other laboratories have reported that blockade of NO synthesis resulted in a decrease (33) or no change (10, 28) in myocardial oxygen consumption. In the present study, sildenafil had no significant effect on myocardial oxygen consumption, or on the increase in oxygen consumption that occurred in response to exercise. Sildenafil had no effect on LV dP/dtmax, in agreement with a previous report demonstrating that sildenafil had no effect on contractility in isolated canine right ventricular trabecular muscle (36). These results suggest that this dose of sildenafil had negligible effects on the PDE isoenzymes that catabolize cAMP in myocardial myocytes. Sildenafil did cause a modest decrease of aortic pressure with no change in heart rate. Similarly, in normal men intravenous sildenafil (40-200 mg) produced transient decreases in systolic and diastolic blood pressures of 10 and 7 mmHg, respectively, with no change in heart rate (17, 40).
In conclusion, PDE5 inhibition with sildenafil augmented the coronary resistance vessel dilation produced by intra-arterial acetylcholine but did not alter the relationship between oxygen delivery to myocardium and myocardial oxygen consumption at rest or during exercise. The finding that inhibition of cGMP degradation did not increase coronary flow relative to myocardial oxygen requirements is in agreement with previous reports demonstrating that NO has little importance in mediating coronary resistance vessel dilation during exercise.| |
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
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We appreciate the expert technical assistance provided by Melanie Crampton, Paul Lindstrom, and Shauna Voss. Secretarial assistance was provided by Carol Quirt. Plasma sildenafil assays were performed by Rachel Halliday of Pfizer Central Research in Sandwich, UK. We also acknowledge the constructive comments of Rob Wallis in developing this investigation and for helpful criticism of the manuscript.
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FOOTNOTES |
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This work was supported in part by National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute Public Health Service Grants HL-20598 and HL-58067 and in part by a Pfizer grant.
Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: R. J. Bache, Div. Cardiology, Dept. Medicine, Univ. of Minnesota Medical School, Box 508 UMHC, 420 Delaware St. SE, Minneapolis, MN 55455 (E-mail: bache001{at}tc.umn.edu).
The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
Received 9 February 2000; accepted in final form 9 June 2000.
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