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Submitted on January 14, 2008
From the Kosair Children's Hospital Research Institute (G.K.S-O., D.G.), Department of Pediatrics, Institute of Molecular Cardiology (R.V.O., Y.G., S.D.P.), Department of Medicine, and Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology (D.G.), University of Louisville, Ky; Department of General Physiology (G.K.S-O., A.D.N.), St Petersburg State University, St Petersburg, Russia; Medical Service (S.D.P.), and the Louisville Veterans' Affairs Medical Center, Louisville, Ky. * To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: david.gozal{at}louisville.edu.
Abstract—Obstructive and central apneas during sleep are associated with chronic intermittent hypoxia (CIH) and increased cardiovascular morbidity. Spontaneously hypertensive rats exposed to CIH during postnatal days 4 to 30 develop exaggerated hypertension as adults. We hypothesized that reactive oxygen species and altered L-Ca2+ channel activity may underlie the postnatal programming of exaggerated blood pressure and cardiac remodeling. Newborn male spontaneously hypertensive rats were exposed to CIH (10% and 21% O2 alternating every 90 seconds, 12 h/d, for postnatal days 4 to 30) or normoxia (room air). In each condition, spontaneously hypertensive rats received daily (SC) 1 of 3 treatments: L-calcium channel blocker nifedipine (5 mg/kg), superoxide dismutase mimetic MnTMPyP pentachloride (10 mg/kg), or vehicle (polyethylene glycol). Blood pressure was evaluated monthly for 6 months after birth, and echocardiographic assessments were conducted at 6 months of age. CIH vehicle-treated rats presented higher systolic blood pressure (187±5 mm Hg) as compared with normoxic vehicle treated controls (163±2 mm Hg; P<0.001). Postnatal CIH elicited marked increases in left ventricular wall thickness in a pattern of concentric hypertrophy with augmented systolic contractility. The treatment with nifedipine in the CIH group attenuated blood pressure (159±2 mm Hg; P<0.001) and normalized left ventricular wall thickness and systolic function, whereas the treatment with SOD mimetic decreased blood pressure (165±2 mm Hg; P<0.001) and reduced left ventricular wall thickness without changes in the systolic function. We conclude that Ca2+ and reactive oxygen species–mediated signaling during intermittent hypoxia are critical mechanisms underlying postnatal programming of an increased severity of hypertension and hypertrophic cardiac remodeling in a genetically susceptible rodent model.
Revised on February 11, 2008
Postnatal Intermittent Hypoxia and Developmental Programming of Hypertension in Spontaneously Hypertensive Rats. The Role of Reactive Oxygen Species and L-Ca2+ Channels
Galia K. Soukhova-O'Hare;
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