Effect of angiotensin inhibition on the coronary artery lower pressure limit in anesthetized dogs.

Can J Physiol Pharmacol

Quebec Heart Institute, Laval Hospital, Department of Cardiology, Ste-Foy, Canada.

Published: November 2000

The renin-angiotensin system plays a critical role in regulating vasoconstriction and vasodilatation that can influence myocardial blood flow and its transmural distribution. We tested the hypothesis that angiotensin inhibition can induce a leftward shift of the coronary autoregulatory pressure-flow relation and preserve distribution of myocardial blood flow at lower coronary perfusion pressures. We established circumflex artery pressure-flow relations under baseline conditions and after intracoronary enalaprilat or losartan potassium. Thereafter, transmural myocardial blood flow was measured at baseline and at the lower coronary pressure limit (LPL). With enalaprilat, the LPL was shifted leftward from 48 +/- 6 mmHg at baseline to 43 +/- 3 mmHg (P = 0.026); with losartan, the LPL was shifted leftward from 48 +/- 10 mmHg at baseline to 41 +/- 5 mmHg (P = 0.027). The leftward shift occurred while cardiac hemodynamics and MVO2 were maintained at control levels. These results indicate that angiotensin inhibition extends the range of coronary autoregulation to lower LPL while preserving myocardial blood flow distribution, a physiologic effect that might explain the lower incidence of coronary events in treated patients.

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