To explore the effects of various antihypertensive regimes on microalbuminuria, an angiotensin II receptor blocker (ARB), valsartan, was substituted for or added to treatment with a calcium channel blocker (CCB). After a 6-month CCB baseline period, 28 Japanese hypertensive patients with incipient diabetic nephropathy (defined as a urinary albumin excretion [UAE] of 30-300 mg/g creatinine), were assigned to two groups according to their blood pressure (BP) levels: in patients with a BP of more than 130/85 mmHg (n=17), valsartan was added to the CCB (Group A), while in patients with a BP <130/85 mmHg, valsartan alone was given (Group B: n=11) for 12 months. UAE was determined before and at 3, 6 and 12 months after the initiation of ARB.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe p53 tumor suppressor gene may act as an inhibitor of vascular neointima formation in response to injury and in the present study the effects of p53 deficiency on external vascular cuff-induced neointima formation were evaluated. Vascular neointima formation was induced by an external vascular cuff; a polyethylene tube placed around a 2 mm segment of the left femoral artery ensheathed the adventitia, but avoided direct intraluminal injury. Two weeks after cuff placement, the cuff-sheathed and contralateral control arteries without cuff from wild-type (n=10) and p53 deficient (n=8) mice were harvested and analyzed by quantitative morphometry.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF