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(Circulation. 2009;119:2656-2662.)
© 2009 American Heart Association, Inc.
Coronary Heart Disease |
From Kings College London British Heart Foundation Centre, Cardiovascular Division, Departments of Cardiology (M.S., N.M., R.D., H.S., J.B., A.M.S.) and Clinical Pharmacology (B.J., P.C.), London, and Department of Cardiovascular Medicine, University of Oxford, Oxford (B.C.), UK.
Correspondence to Professor Ajay M Shah, Department of Cardiology, The James Black Centre, Kings College London School of Medicine, 125 Coldharbour Ln, London SE5 9NU, UK. E-mail ajay.shah{at}kcl.ac.uk
Received September 16, 2008; accepted April 1, 2009.
Background— Nitric oxide (NO)–mediated local regulation of vascular tone is considered to involve endothelial NO synthase (eNOS). However, we recently reported that human forearm basal microvascular tone in vivo is tonically regulated by neuronal NO synthase (nNOS), in contrast to an acetylcholine-stimulated reduction in tone, which is eNOS dependent. Here, we investigated the in vivo effects of an nNOS-selective inhibitor, S-methyl-L-thiocitrulline (SMTC), on the human coronary circulation and on flow-mediated dilatation in the forearm.
Methods and Results— In patients with angiographically normal coronary arteries, intracoronary infusion of SMTC (0.625 µmol/min) reduced basal coronary blood flow by 34.1±5.2% (n=10; P<0.01) and epicardial coronary diameter by 3.6±1.2% (P=0.02) but had no effect on increases in flow evoked by intracoronary substance P (20 pmol/min). The nonselective NOS inhibitor NG-monomethyl-L-arginine (25 µmol/min) also reduced basal coronary flow (by 22.3±5.3%; n=8; P<0.01) but, in contrast to SMTC, inhibited substance P–induced increases in flow (P<0.01). In healthy volunteers, local infusion of SMTC (0.2 µmol/min) reduced radial artery blood flow by 36.0±6.4% (n=10; P=0.03) but did not affect flow-mediated dilatation (P=0.55). In contrast, NG-monomethyl-L-arginine (2 µmol/min) infusion reduced radial blood flow to a similar degree (by 39.7±11.8%; P=0.02) but also inhibited flow-mediated dilatation by
80% (P<0.01).
Conclusions— These data indicate that local nNOS-derived NO regulates basal blood flow in the human coronary vascular bed, whereas substance P–stimulated vasodilatation is eNOS mediated. Thus, nNOS and eNOS have distinct local roles in the physiological regulation of human coronary vascular tone in vivo.
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