Submitted on October 20, 2003
Accepted on February 25, 2004
From the Wales Heart Research Institute (M.S., P.G., J.T., L.L., A.J.M.B., A.K.N., J.R.C., M.P.F.), Cardiff, UK; the Medical Data Research Centre (N.P.), Providence Health System, Ore; the Department of Clinical Pharmacology (A.D.S.), Ninewells Hospital, Dundee, UK; and the Department of Medicine and Medical Physiology (J.V.T.), University of Calgary, Alberta, Canada.
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: matthschmitt{at}doctors.org.uk.
Objective--Natriuretic peptides (NPs) reduce central venous pressure in patients with chronic heart failure (cHF) despite attenuation of arterial, renal, and humoral effects. This suggests a preserved venodilator response. This study had 4 aims: to compare the venodilator effects of human NPs in patients with cHF; to assess the contribution of basal ANP and BNP levels to regulation of forearm vascular volume (FVV); to test the hypothesis that venous ANP responsiveness is preserved in cHF; and to assess the involvement of endothelial nitric oxide-synthase (eNOS) in NP-induced vascular effects.
Methods and Results--Venous and arterial forearm vascular responses to incremental intra-arterial doses of ANP, Urodilatin, BNP, CNP, or the ANP receptor antagonist A71915 were studied in 53 patients and 11 controls. ANP receptor antagonism reduced FVV by 4.4%±1.2% (P<0.05). The forearm blood flow (FBF) response to ANP was significantly blunted in patients versus controls (P<0.01), whereas FVV increased similarly in both groups (maximum 14.7% and 13.4%, both P<0.001). The eNOS blockade reduced ANP-induced FBF changes in controls but not in patients (P<0.05), whereas similar reductions in FVV changes were seen in groups (both P<0.001).
Conclusions--In cHF venous, but not arterial, ANP responsiveness is preserved. Arterial endothelial dysfunction may contribute to NP resistance.
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