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Levitra & Diabetes: A clinical study
The phosphodiesterase-5 inhibitor vardenafil (Levitra®) improves
cardiovascular dysfunction in experimental diabetes mellitus.
Radovits
T, Bömicke
T, Kökény
G, Arif
R, Loganathan
S, Kécsán
K, Korkmaz
S, Barnucz
E, Sandner
P, Karck
M, Szabó
G.
Department of Cardiac Surgery, University
of Heidelberg, Heidelberg, Germany.
Background and purpose:
Patients with diabetes mellitus exhibit generalized
endothelial and cardiac dysfunction with decreased nitric oxide production.
Elevated intracellular cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cGMP) levels contribute
to an effective cardioprotection in different pathophysiological conditions. In
this study, we investigated whether chronic treatment with the
phosphodiesterase-5 inhibitor vardenafil could improve diabetic cardiovascular
dysfunction by up-regulating the nitric oxide-cGMP pathway in the vessel wall
and myocardium. Experimental approach: Diabetes was induced in young rats by a
single intraperitoneal injection of streptozotocin (60 mg.kg(-1)). In the
treatment group, vardenafil (10 mg.kg(-1).day(-1)) was given orally for 8 weeks.
Diabetic control animals received vehicle for the same time. Left ventricular
pressure-volume relations were measured by using a microtip Millar
pressure-volume conductance catheter, and indexes of contractility, such as the
slope of end-systolic pressure-volume relationship (E(max)) and preload
recruitable stroke work (PRSW), were calculated. In organ bath experiments for
isometric tension with rings of isolated aortae, endothelium-dependent and
independent vasorelaxation was investigated by using acetylcholine and sodium
nitroprusside.
Key results:
When compared with the non-diabetic controls, diabetic rats
showed increased myocardial and vascular transforming growth factor-beta1
expression, impaired left ventricular contractility (impairment of E(max) by
53%, PRSW by 40%; P < 0.05) and vascular dysfunction. Treatment with
vardenafil resulted in higher cGMP levels, reduced transforming growth
factor-beta1 expression, significantly improved cardiac function (improvement of
E(max) by 95%, PRSW by 69%; P < 0.05) and greater vasorelaxation to
acetylcholine and sodium nitroprusside in aortae from diabetic animals.
Conclusions and implications:
Our results demonstrate that impaired vascular cGMP
signalling contributes to the development of diabetic vascular and cardiac
dysfunction, which can be prevented by chronic phosphodiesterase-5 inhibition.
PMID: 19298393 [PubMed - as supplied by
publisher]
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