Hypertension preserves the magnitude of microvascular flow-mediated dilation following transient elevation in intraluminal pressure

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Abstract

Objective: The objective of this study was to measure flow-mediated dilation (FMD) prior to and following transient increases in intraluminal pressure (IILP) in resistance arterioles isolated from subjects with and without coronary artery disease (CAD) (CAD and non-CAD) and non-CAD subjects with hypertension. Methods: Arterioles were isolated from discarded surgical tissues (adipose and atrial) from patients without coronary artery disease (non-CAD; ≤1 risk factor, excluding hypertension), with CAD, and non-CAD patients with hypertension (hypertension as the only risk factor). To simulate transient hypertension, increased IILP was generated (150 mmHg, 30 min) by gravity. Arterioles were constricted with endothelin-1, followed by FMD and endothelial-independent dilation prior to and following exposure to IILP. Results: IILP reduced FMD in non-CAD and CAD arterioles relative to pre-IILP (p

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Hughes, W. E., Zinkevich, N., Gutterman, D. D., & Beyer, A. M. (2021). Hypertension preserves the magnitude of microvascular flow-mediated dilation following transient elevation in intraluminal pressure. Physiological Reports, 9(3). https://doi.org/10.14814/phy2.14507

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