Affiliation:
1. From the Medical School (H.M., X.W.), University of Tampere, and Departments of Clinical Physiology (M.K.) and Internal Medicine (P.A., I.P.), Tampere University Hospital, Tampere, Finland.
Abstract
Background
Dietary calcium intake has been suggested to correlate inversely with blood pressure in humans and experimental animals. However, the effects of calcium supplementation on hypertensive disturbances of the endothelium have not been well characterized.
Methods and Results
Wistar-Kyoto rats were made hypertensive by deoxycorticosterone (DOC)-NaCl treatment, but a concurrent increase in chow calcium content from 1.1% to 2.5% markedly attenuated the rise in blood pressure. The function of isolated mesenteric arterial rings in vitro was investigated at the close of the 10-week study. In norepinephrine-precontracted rings, the relaxations to acetylcholine (ACh) and ADP, as well as to nitroprusside, 3-morpholinosydnonimine, and isoproterenol were attenuated in hypertensive rats on 1.1% calcium, but these responses were improved by calcium supplementation. In the presence of
N
G
-nitro-
l
-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME), the relaxations to ACh in hypertensive animals on normal calcium were practically absent, whereas in normotensive rats and calcium-supplemented hypertensive rats, distinct relaxations to higher concentrations of ACh were still present. These responses were reduced by 30% to 50% with apamin, a blocker of Ca
2+
-activated K
+
channels, and were further inhibited by blockade of ATP-dependent K
+
channels with glyburide. Interestingly, relaxations elicited by ACh and ADP during precontraction with 60 mmol/L KCl (preventing endothelium-dependent hyperpolarization) were not impaired in hypertensive animals. The contractile sensitivity of endothelium-intact arterial rings to 5-hydroxytryptamine and norepinephrine was higher in hypertensive rats on either normal or high-calcium diet, whereas the increase in contractile sensitivity caused by L-NAME corresponded in all groups.
Conclusions
High-calcium diet markedly opposed experimental DOC-NaCl hypertension, an effect associated with improved arterial relaxation, while abnormalities of vascular contractile properties remained unaffected. In particular, the hyperpolarization-related component of endothelium-dependent arterial relaxation, mediated via opening of arterial K
+
channels, could be augmented by calcium supplementation in DOC-NaCl hypertension.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Subject
Physiology (medical),Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine
Cited by
45 articles.
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