Publications by authors named "Ebeigbe A"

The mechanisms of the increased vascular tone associated with vaso-occlusive crisis of sickle cell disease have not been clearly defined. The goal of the present study was to examine the role of vascular smooth muscle membrane Na+-K+-ATPase enzyme activity as well as nitric oxide synthase inhibition on the contractile responses induced by sickle erythrocyte constituents. 2 mm ring segments of rabbit carotid arterial ring preparations were placed in 20 ml organ baths containing physiological salt solution (PSS) bubbled with 95% O2, 5% CO2, at 37oC and pH 7.

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Malaria etiologies with pathophysiological similarities to hypertension currently constitute a major subject of research. The malaria-high blood pressure hypothesis is strongly supported by observations of the increasing incidence of hypertension in malaria-endemic, low- and middle-income countries with poor socioeconomic conditions, particularly in sub-Saharan African countries. Malnutrition and low birth weight with persistent symptomatic malaria presentations in pregnancy correlate strongly with the development of preeclampsia, gestational hypertension and subsequent hypertension in adult life.

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Background: Aging is a major non-modifiable risk factor for hypertension. Changes in aging are similar to those seen in hypertension in the vasculature. Also, aging increases the vascular dysfunction that occurs in hypertension.

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There is a large increase in uterine arterial blood flow during normal pregnancy. Structural and cellular adjustments occur in the uterine vasculature during pregnancy to accommodate this increased blood flow through a complex adaptive process that is dependent on multiple coordinated and interactive influences and this process is known as "vascular remodeling." The etiology of preeclampsia involves aberrant placentation and vascular remodeling leading to reduced uteroplacental perfusion.

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Four subtypes of receptors (H1, H2, H3 and H4) mediate the actions of histamine. In the vascular wall, the effects of histamine are mediated via H1 and H2 receptors and the actions are modulated by H3 receptor subtype located on presynaptic neurones. Alterations in vascular responses to histamine are associated with experimental as well as a human form of hypertension, suggesting a role for histanine in cardiovascular regulation.

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Objective: Malaria causes more deaths worldwide than any other parasitic disease. Many aspects of the biology that governs the pathogenesis of this parasite are still unclear. Therefore insight into the complexity of the pathogenesis of malaria is vital to understand the disease, particularly as it relates to blood pressure.

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Objective: Adherence of erythrocytes infected with Plasmodium falciparum (P falciparum) to microvascular endothelial cells (sequestration) is considered to play an important role in parasite virulence and pathogenesis. In this study, we have examined the possibility that there is altered vascular reactivity due to the direct interaction between the parasitized erythrocytes and vascular endothelial cells and that it could be tissue specific.

Method: Ring preparations of blood vessels from the rabbit carotid and rat aorta were studied using standard organ bath techniques.

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Objective: In this study, we have examined the possibility that there is altered vascular reactivity due to the direct interaction between parasitized erythrocytes and vascular endothelial cells.

Method: Ring preparations of rat aorta were studied using standard in vitro techniques, the rings were mounted in 20 ml organ baths containing PSS under an initial load of 1 g, maintained at 37 degrees C at pH 7.4 and isometric contractions were recorded electronically.

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The precise mechanism by which ketamine induces relaxation of vascular smooth muscle is not clear. The goal of this study was to further characterize the vascular actions of ketamine in rabbit aortic smooth muscles. Ring segments (2mm) of rabbit aortae were suspended in 20ml organ baths containing physiological salt solution (PSS) and isometric contractions were recorded at 37 degrees C and pH 7.

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Background: We have shown previously that cryopreservation of human internal mammary arteries activates protein kinase C and enhances intracellular Ca(2+) [Ca(2+)](i). We now present evidence that in human saphenous veins (HSV) cryoinjury is associated with activation of the Rho/Rho kinase signaling pathways and enhanced [Ca(2+)](i).

Methods: HSV were investigated in vitro either unfrozen within 12h after removal or after storage at -196 degrees C in a cryomedium containing 1.

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We have investigated how the endothelium affects vascular responses following sub-chronic low dose cyanide administration. Cyanide exists in low levels in cassava foods, which are widely consumed in tropical Africa. Adult rabbits were administered 0.

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Potassium adaptation reduces blood pressure (BP) in hypertensive humans and animals but its effects on normotensive BP and the nature of pressor responses to vasoactive drugs are not known. We measured directly, the mean arterial pressure (MAP) of normotensive control, normotensive potassium-adapted (given 0.75% potassium chloride solution for 5 weeks), renal hypertensive (RHP), and renal hypertensive Wistar rats later adapted to potassium.

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The contributions of superoxide dismutase (SOD) and Na(+), K(+)-ATPase to the altered vascular reactivity in potassium-adapted rats were investigated to test the hypothesis that smooth muscle hyperpolarisation may be involved. Isometric contractions to noradrenaline (NA), 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT), and relaxations to acetylcholine (ACh), levcromakalim (LEV) and sodium nitroprusside (SNP), were measured in aortic rings from potassium-adapted rats. Pieces of the aortae were also excised from the animals and assayed for SOD and Na(+), K(+)-ATPase.

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Dietary potassium is known to cause reduction in blood pressure in several models of hypertension in human and animal studies but its haematological effects are not known. Here, experiments are designed to study the haematological effects of potassium adaptation (achieved by administering 0.75% KCl solution in drinking water for five weeks) in Wistar rats.

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The experiments were designed to elucidate the mechanism of thiopentone-induced inhibition of contractile responses in isolated human epigastric arteries. Segments of human epigastric arteries were obtained from patients who underwent elective or emergency caesarean section, placed in standard physiological salt solution (PSS), cut into rings at 3 mm intervals and suspended in organ baths for recording of isometric contractions at 37 degrees C, and pH 7.4.

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The vascular effects of 1-methyl-4-phenyl-1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine (MPTP), a meperidine analog, were studied in vitro on ring preparations of rat aorta for the purpose of characterizing its mode of action. Isometric contractions were evaluated under standard organ bath conditions. Exposure to MPTP (10(-12)-1.

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The vasorelaxant effects of acetylcholine (Ach) and histamine have been examined on 10(-7) M-noradrenaline (NA)-precontracted ring preparations of epigastric arteries from normotensive and pregnancy-induced hypertensive women. Contractile responses to 10(-7) M-NA were significantly (p < 0.05) enhanced following removal of the endothelium.

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We have examined the influence of prostanoid synthesis inhibitors on the relaxation responses induced by cicletanine in ring preparations of isolated human epigastric arteries following precontraction induced by 10(-7) M noradrenaline. Cicletanine caused concentration-dependent relaxations, uninfluenced by the cyclooxygenase inhibitors, meclofenamate (1, 10 microM) and indomethacin (1, 10 microM) but significantly (p < 0.05) attenuated by the specific prostacyclin synthesis inhibitor, tranylcypromine (0.

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Porcine and human bronchi have been investigated in vitro without or after storage at -196 degrees C in Krebs-Henseleit solution containing 2.0 M dimethyl sulphoxide and 0.1 M sucrose as cryoprotectants.

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Responses to histamine have been studied on ring preparations of epigastric artery obtained from normal and from pregnancy-induced hypertensive (PIH) women to characterize the mode of action of histamine in this vascular preparation. In non-contracted arterial rings, histamine elicited concentration-dependent H1 receptor-mediated contractions, competitively antagonised by mepyramine and cicletanine with pA2 values of 9.1 and 7.

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1. The contractile responses of aortic ring preparations from Sprague-Dawley rats made hypertensive by 6-week dietary salt loading were studied. The test and control diet contained 8.

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1. The vascular effects of cicletanine have been studied in vitro on ring preparations of inferior epigastric arteries from normotensive human females and human females with pregnancy-induced hypertension (preeclampsia). 2.

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The inhibitory effect of dichlorovos (an organophosphate pesticide) on Ca(2+)-dependent contractions has been studied in isolated helical strips of rat tail arteries. Isometric contractions were evaluated under standard organ bath conditions. Dichlorovos caused concentration-dependent relaxation of 10(-7) M NE-induced contractions as well as inhibition of both phasic and tonic components of NE contractions.

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