Cardiovascular Pressor Reactivity After Chronic Converting Enzyme Inhibition

Bernasconi, Michaela ; Marone, Claudio ; Beretta-Piccoli, Carlo ; Lepori, Giuseppe ; Shaw, Sidney ; Weidmann, Peter

In: American Journal of Hypertension, 1991, vol. 4, no. 4_Pt_1, p. 348-355

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    Summary
    In addition to inhibiting the formation of angiotensin II, chronic converting enzyme inhibition may affect other blood pressure modulating factors. The influence of an 8 week treatment phase with Cilazapril on the activity of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone and sympathetic nervous systems, the pressor reactivity to infused angiotensin II or norepinephrine, the chronotropic response to isoproterenol, and body sodium and plasma atrial natriuretic peptide concentrations was assessed in 11 normal subjects and 12 patients with essential hypertension. As compared to a 4 week placebo phase, Cilazapril decreased arterial pressure in both study groups (from 124/83 ± 9/6 to 114/77 ± 9/5 mm Hg and from 143/102 ± 13/7 to 137/96 ± 10/10 mm Hg; Ρ < .025); exchangeable sodium (−158 mmol and, respectively, −104 mmol) and upright plasma aldosterone (−24% and −15%) also tended to fall. Heart rate, the chronotropic response to posture or isoproterenol, plasma norepinephrine levels, the concentration/pressor response curve to norepinephrine, plasma atrial natriuretic peptide concentration, plasma angiotensin II and the responses of blood pressure or plasma aldosterone to angiotensin II were unchanged after 8 weeks of Cilazapril. Plasma renin activity increased (+175% to + 650%) These findings indicate that the blood pressure lowering effect of Cilazapril in the stable phase of pharmacological intervention is not associated with modifications of sympathetic-dependent pressor reactivity or ^-adrenergic sensitivity. Plasma angiotensin II concentration and angiotensin II-dependent pathways including the pressor and aldosterone responsiveness to angiotensin II are also unchanged. Am J Hypertens 1991;4:348-355