(Hypertension. 1995;25:1003-1007.)
© 1995 American Heart Association, Inc.
Articles |
From the Division of Nephrology, Escola Paulista de Medicina Sao Paulo (Brazil); and the Section of Hypertension and Atherosclerosis, Boston (Mass) University School of Medicine.
Correspondence to Haralambos Gavras, MD, Hypertension and Atherosclerosis Section, Boston University School of Medicine, 80 E Concord St, Boston, MA 02118.
Abstract The purpose of these experiments was to determine in
normotensive rats the role of endogenous bradykinin, prostaglandins,
and nitric oxide in glucose metabolism and blood pressure response to
hyperinsulinemia. Normotensive Wistar rats were treated with two
different bradykinin antagonists, indomethacin or
N
-nitro-L-arginine methyl
ester, concurrently with a euglycemic clamp with insulin infusion rates
of 3 or 6 mU/kg per minute. Glucose uptake, steady-state plasma insulin
levels, and insulin sensitivity index were determined over 2 hours.
Bradykinin inhibition dramatically reduced glucose uptake and insulin
sensitivity index during both the lower and higher insulin infusion
rates to 30% and 32%, respectively, of values observed in control
rats. Inhibition of prostaglandins or nitric oxide did not alter
glucose metabolism in these rats. Blood pressure remained unchanged in
the control group throughout the clamp but increased significantly in
rats submitted to inhibition of bradykinin, prostaglandins, or nitric
oxide, suggesting that these vasodilator systems tend to counteract the
hypertensive effect of hyperinsulinemia. The counterregulatory
component attributable to bradykinin was about twice as great as that
attributable to nitric oxide. These findings suggest that insulin
infusion in normotensive Wistar rats fails to raise blood pressure
because its effects are offset by mobilization of vasodilator
mechanisms, such as bradykinin, prostaglandins, and nitric oxide.
Bradykinin seems to play the most important homeostatic role under
these conditions, because its inhibition significantly reduces insulin
sensitivity and allows blood pressure to rise.
Key Words: bradykinin prostaglandins nitric oxide insulin euglycemic clamp technique indomethacin L-NAME
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