Angiopoietin-1 increases arteriolar vasoconstriction to phenylephrine during sepsis.
Sepsis leads to a reduction in vascular tone and a loss of vasoconstriction in response to catecholamines. We propose that angiopoietin-1 ( Ang-1), which is known to modulate vascular inflammation and nitric oxide (NO), could improve responsiveness to vasopressor agents during sepsis. Mesenteric arterioles (300-400 microm) from rats (n=19) were mounted in a pressurized myograph and incubated with lipopolysaccharide (LPS, 50 microg/mL) for up to 4 h to model sepsis. Vasoconstriction (mean+/-SD) to phenylephrine (10(-8)-10(-3) M) was reduced in the presence of LPS (4 h, pD2: 5.8+/-0.2 (controls, n=6), 1.4+/-2.2 (LPS, n=6); maximal constriction: 48.2+/-4.8% (controls), 2.6+/-5.8% (LPS), P<0.05). However, in the presence of Ang-1 (250 ng/mL) phenylephrine caused greater vasoconstriction compared to LPS alone (4 h, pD2: 4.5+/-2.1; maximal constriction: 12.6+/-4.0% (n=7), P<0.05). In conclusion, Ang-1 increases vasoconstriction to phenylephrine in the presence of LPS. During sepsis therefore, Ang-1 increases vascular reactivity and has the potential to increase blood pressure and decrease vasopressor requirements in vivo.[1]References
- Angiopoietin-1 increases arteriolar vasoconstriction to phenylephrine during sepsis. Hall, E., Brookes, Z.L. Regul. Pept. (2005) [Pubmed]
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