Increased Angiotensin II Sensitivity Contributes to Microvascular Dysfunction in Women Who Have Had Preeclampsia

Author:

Stanhewicz Anna E.1,Jandu Sandeep1,Santhanam Lakshmi1,Alexander Lacy M.1

Affiliation:

1. From the Department of Kinesiology, Pennsylvania State University, University Park, (A.E.S., L.M.A.); and Department of Anesthesiology and Critical Care Medicine, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD (S.J., L.S.).

Abstract

Women who have had preeclampsia have increased cardiovascular disease risk; however, the mechanism(s) responsible for this association remain unclear. Microvascular damage sustained during a preeclamptic pregnancy may persist postpartum. The putative mechanisms mediating this dysfunction include a reduction in NO-dependent dilation and an increased sensitivity to angiotensin II. In this study, we evaluated endothelium-dependent dilation, angiotensin II sensitivity, and the therapeutic effect of angiotensin II receptor blockade (losartan) on endothelium-dependent dilation in vivo in the microvasculature of women with a history of preeclampsia (n=12) and control women who had a healthy pregnancy (n=12). We hypothesized that preeclampsia would have (1) reduced endothelium-dependent dilation, (2) reduced NO-mediated dilation, and (3) increased sensitivity to angiotensin II. We further hypothesized that localized losartan would increase endothelium-dependent vasodilation in preeclampsia. We assessed microvascular endothelium-dependent vasodilator function by measurement of cutaneous vascular conductance responses to graded infusion of acetylcholine (acetylcholine; 10 −7 –102 mmol/L) and a standardized local heating protocol in control sites and sites treated with 15 mmol/L L-NAME ( N G -nitro- l -arginine methyl ester; NO-synthase inhibitor) or 43 µmol/L losartan. Further, we assessed microvascular vasoconstrictor sensitivity to angiotensin II (10 −20 –10 −4 mol/L). Preeclampsia had significantly reduced endothelium-dependent dilation (−0.3±0.5 versus −1.0±0.4 log EC50 ; P <0.001) and NO-dependent dilation (16±3% versus 39±6%; P =0.006). Preeclampsia also had augmented vasoconstrictor sensitivity to angiotensin II (−10.2±1.3 versus −8.3±0.5; P =0.006). Angiotensin II type I receptor inhibition augmented endothelium-dependent vasodilation and NO-dependent dilation in preeclampsia but had no effect in healthy pregnancy. These data suggest that women who have had preeclampsia have persistent microvascular dysfunction postpartum, mediated, in part, by increased sensitivity to angiotensin II.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Internal Medicine

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