Login / Signup

Sodium nitroglycerin induces middle cerebral artery vasodilatation in young, healthy adults.

Jenna M SchulzBaraa K Al-KhazrajiJenna M Schulz
Published in: Experimental physiology (2018)
Recent evidence indicates that basal cerebral conduit vessels dilate with hypercapnia, with a nitric oxide (NO) mechanism explaining one way in which parenchymal cerebral arterioles dilate. However, whether NO affects basal cerebral artery dilatation remains unknown. This study quantified the effect of an exogenous NO donor [sodium nitroglycerin (NTG); 0.4 mg sublingual spray] on the right middle cerebral artery (rMCA) cross-sectional area (CSA), blood velocity and overall blood flow. Measures of vessel CSA (7 T magnetic resonance imaging) and MCA blood velocity (transcranial Doppler ultrasound) were made at baseline (BL) and after exogenous NTG or placebo (PLO) administration in young, healthy individuals (n = 10, two males, age range 20-23 years). The CSA increased in the rMCA [BL, 5.2 ± 1.2 mm2 ; PLO, 5.4 ± 1.5 mm2 ; NTG, 6.6 ± 1.5 mm2 , P < 0.05; mean ± SD]. Concurrently, rMCA blood velocity decreased from BL during NTG compared with PLO (BL, 67 ± 10 cm s-1 ; PLO, 62 ± 10 cm s-1 ; NTG, 59 ± 9.3 cm s-1 , P < 0.05; mean ± SD]. However, total MCA blood flow did not change with NTG or PLO [BL, 221 ± 37.4 ml min-1 ; PLO, 218 ± 35.0 ml min-1 ; NTG, 213 ± 46.4 ml min-1 ). Therefore, exogenous NO mediates a dilatory response in the rMCA, but not in its downstream vascular bed.
Keyphrases