Login / Signup

The role of endothelin A receptors in peripheral vascular control at rest and during exercise in patients with hypertension.

Jesse C CraigStephanie P KurtiD Taylor La SalleJames CerbieStephen M RatchfordJayson R GiffordKanokwan BunsawatAshley D NelsonAmber D BledsoeDavid E MorganD Walter WrayRussell S RichardsonJoel D Trinity
Published in: The Journal of physiology (2019)
Patients with hypertension can exhibit impaired muscle blood flow and exaggerated increases in blood pressure during exercise. While endothelin (ET)-1 plays a role in regulating blood flow and pressure during exercise in health, little is known about the role of ET-1 in the cardiovascular response to exercise in hypertension. Therefore, eight volunteers diagnosed with hypertension were studied during exercise with either saline or BQ-123 (ETA receptor antagonist) infusion following a 2-week withdrawal of anti-hypertensive medications. The common femoral artery and vein were catheterized for drug infusion, blood collection and blood pressure measurements, and leg blood flow was measured by Doppler ultrasound. Patients exercised at both absolute (0, 5, 10, 15 W) and relative (40, 60, 80% peak power) intensities. BQ-123 increased blood flow at rest (79 ± 87 ml/min; P = 0.03) and augmented the exercise-induced hyperaemia at most intensities (80% saline: Δ3818±1222 vs. BQ-123: Δ4812±1469 ml/min; P = 0.001). BQ-123 reduced leg MAP at rest (-8 ± 4 mmHg; P < 0.001) and lower intensities (0-10 W; P < 0.05). Systemic diastolic blood pressure was reduced (0 W, 40%; P < 0.05), but systemic MAP was defended by an increased cardiac output. The exercise pressor response (ΔMAP) did not differ between conditions (80% saline: 25 ± 10, BQ-123: 30 ± 7 mmHg; P = 0.17). Thus, ET-1, acting through the ETA receptors, contributes to the control of blood pressure at rest and lower intensity exercise in these patients. Furthermore, the finding that ET-1 constrains the blood flow response to exercise suggests that ETA receptor antagonism could be a therapeutic approach to improve blood flow during exercise in hypertension.
Keyphrases