Angiotensin converting enzyme inhibition improves cerebrovascular control during exercise in male rats with heart failure

•We measured brain blood flow (BF) in rats with heart failure treated with captopril.•Captopril improved increases in BF during exercise to the posterior cerebral region.•Captopril had no effect on maximal oxygen consumption or exercise tolerance. We investigated the effects of chronic (∼7 weeks) tr...

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Veröffentlicht in:Respiratory physiology & neurobiology 2021-04, Vol.286, p.103613-103613, Article 103613
Hauptverfasser: Butenas, Alec L.E., Colburn, Trenton D., Baumfalk, Dryden R., Ade, Carl J., Hageman, K. Sue, Copp, Steven W., Poole, David C., Musch, Timothy I.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•We measured brain blood flow (BF) in rats with heart failure treated with captopril.•Captopril improved increases in BF during exercise to the posterior cerebral region.•Captopril had no effect on maximal oxygen consumption or exercise tolerance. We investigated the effects of chronic (∼7 weeks) treatment with the angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitor Captopril in rats with heart failure with reduced ejection fraction (HF-rEF) on brain blood flow (BF; radiolabeled microspheres) at rest and during submaximal exercise. We hypothesized that middle cerebral, posterior cerebral, and cerebellar BF during submaximal exercise (20 m/min, 5% incline) would be reduced in rats with HF-rEF (n = 10) compared to healthy (SHAM, n = 10) controls and HF-rEF rats chronically treated with Captopril (HF-rEF + Cap., n = 20). During submaximal exercise middle cerebral (HF-rEF + Cap.: 274 ± 12; HF-rEF: 234 ± 23; SHAM: 248 ± 24 ml/min/100 g) and cerebellar (HF-rEF + Cap.: 222 ± 14; HF-rEF: 243 ± 22; SHAM: 214 ± 23 ml/min/100 g) BF increased from rest in all groups with no difference among groups (P > 0.24). Posterior cerebral BF increased from rest in all groups but was lower than SHAM (394 ± 46 ml/min/100 g; P = 0.03) in HF-rEF (298 ± 19 ml/min/100 g) but not HF-rEF + Cap. (356 ± 18 ml/min/100 g; P = 0.14), supporting the concept that ACE inhibition in HF-rEF elevates brain BF increases, at least to the posterior cerebral region, during moderate intensity exercise/physical activity.
ISSN:1569-9048
1878-1519
DOI:10.1016/j.resp.2020.103613