The effect of intrafetal infusion of metyrapone on arterial blood pressure and on the arterial blood pressure response to angiotensin II in the sheep fetus during late gestation
While the impact of exogenous glucocorticoids on the fetal cardiovascular system has been well defined, relatively few studies have characterised the role of endogenous fetal glucocorticoids in the regulation of arterial blood pressure (BP) during late gestation. We have therefore infused metyrapone...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Journal of physiology 2003-10, Vol.552 (2), p.621-633 |
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Zusammenfassung: | While the impact of exogenous glucocorticoids on the fetal cardiovascular system has been well defined, relatively few studies
have characterised the role of endogenous fetal glucocorticoids in the regulation of arterial blood pressure (BP) during late
gestation. We have therefore infused metyrapone, an inhibitor of cortisol biosynthesis, into fetal sheep from 125 days gestation
(when fetal cortisol concentrations are low) and from 137 days gestation (when fetal cortisol concentrations are increasing)
and measured fetal plasma cortisol, 11-desoxycortisol and ACTH, fetal systolic, diastolic and mean arterial BP, heart rate,
and the fetal BP responses to increasing doses of angiotensin II (AII). At 125 days gestation, there was a significant increase
in fetal plasma ACTH and 11-desoxycortisol by 24 h after (+24 h) the start of the metyrapone infusion, and plasma cortisol
concentrations were not different at +24 h when compared with pre-infusion values. Whilst the initial fall in circulating
cortisol concentrations may have been transient, systolic, diastolic and mean arterial BP were â¼5â6 mmHg lower ( P < 0.05) in metyrapone- than in vehicle-infused fetuses at 24â48 h after the start of the infusion. When metyrapone was infused
from 137/138 days gestation, there was a significant decrease in plasma cortisol concentrations by +6 h, which was followed
by an increase back to pre-infusion values. While cortisol concentrations decreased, there was no change in fetal mean arterial
BP during the first 24 h after the start of metyrapone infusion. Mean fetal arterial BP values at 137â139 days gestation were
not different in fetuses that had been infused with either vehicle or metyrapone from 125 days gestation or with metyrapone
from 137â138 days gestation. At 137â139 days gestation, however, arterial BP responses to increasing doses of AII were significantly
blunted in fetuses that had been infused with metyrapone from 125 days gestation, when compared with fetuses that had been
infused with metyrapone from 137/138 days gestation or with vehicle from 125 days gestation. The dissociation of the gestational
age increase in arterial BP and the effects of intrafetal AII on fetal arterial BP indicates that increase in fetal BP with
gestational age is not entirely a result of an increased vascular responsiveness to endogenous AII. Furthermore there may
be a critical window during late gestation when the actions of cortisol contribute to the development of vasc |
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ISSN: | 0022-3751 1469-7793 |
DOI: | 10.1113/jphysiol.2003.049437 |