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Shock:
May 2009 - Volume 31 - Issue 5 - pp 535-541
doi: 10.1097/SHK.0b013e31818b99c2
Basic Science Aspects

VARIABLE EFFECTS OF INHIBITING iNOS AND CLOSING THE VASCULAR ATP-SENSITIVE POTASSIUM CHANNEL (VIA ITS PORE-FORMING AND SULFONYLUREA RECEPTOR SUBUNITS) IN ENDOTOXIC SHOCK

O'Brien, Alastair; Stidwill, Raymond P.; Clapp, Lucie H.; Singer, Mervyn

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Abstract

Excess production of NO and activation of vascular ATP-sensitive potassium (KATP) channels are implicated in the hypotension and vascular hyporeactivity associated with endotoxic shock. Using a fluid-resuscitated endotoxic rat model, we compared the cardiovascular effects of an iNOS inhibitor and two distinct inhibitors of the KATP channel. Endotoxin (LPS) was administered to anesthetized, spontaneously breathing, fluid-resuscitated adult male Wistar rats, in which MAP, aortic and renal blood flow, and hepatic microvascular oxygenation were monitored continuously. At 120 min, the iNOS inhibitor, GW273629, and the KATP-channel inhibitors, PNU-37883A and glyburide, were administered separately, and their effects on hemodynamics and oxygenation were examined. We found that GW273629 increased MAP over and above the pressor effect achieved in sham animals. Inhibiting KATP channels via the pore-forming subunit (PNU-37883A and high-dose glyburide) produced significant pressor effects, whereas inhibiting the sulfonylurea receptor with low-dose glyburide was ineffective. No agent reversed the fall in aortic or renal blood flow, the fall in hepatic microvascular oxygenation, or the metabolic acidosis that occurred in LPS-treated animals. We conclude that inhibition of the KATP channel via the pore-forming, but not the sulfonylurea receptor subunit, increases blood pressure in a short-term endotoxic model. However, this was not accompanied by any improvement in macrocirculatory or microcirculatory organ blood flow nor reversal of metabolic acidosis. It therefore remains uncertain whether the iNOS pathway or the KATP channel represents a potential target for drug development in the treatment of endotoxic shock.

©2009The Shock Society

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