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H2S causes contraction and relaxation of major arteries of the rabbit

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 03:36 authored by Martin Caprnda, Tawar Qaradakhi, Joanne Hart, Nazarii Kobyliak, Radka Opatrilova, Peter Kruzliak, Anthony Zulli
Objective: Cardiovascular disease (CVD) caused by atherosclerosis remains a worldwide burden. Hydrogen sulfide is a promising new therapeutic avenue for the treatment of CVD, however reports show exogenous H2S has both vasodilator and vasoconstrictor effects depending on organ examined, and in vitro studies in animal models which are not resistant to developing atherosclerosis are limited. We sought to determine if rabbit arteries constricted or dilated to hydrogen sulfide. Material and methods: The aorta, carotid, renal and iliac arteries were harvested from New Zealand White rabbits (n = 4) and subjected to a concentration response curve to the fast H2S releaser NaHS. In addition, a bolus dose of NaHS was used to determine if further dilation was achievable after maximum dilation to acetylcholine similar to nitric oxide donors. Further, NaHS was used to determine if H2S could impair homocysteine induced endothelial dysfunction. Results: Blood vessels relaxed poorly to NaHS and contracted at higher doses. A bolus dose of NaHS relaxed then contracted the aorta, however a bolus dose of NaHS after maximal relaxation to acetylcholine caused marked contraction. NaHS did not prevent homocysteine induced vascular dysfunction. Conclusion: NaHS at low doses caused minor relaxation of rabbit blood vessels, indicating a possible therapeutic benefit for low dose H2S in the cellular milieu.

History

Journal

Biomedicine and Pharmacotherapy

Volume

89

Start page

56

End page

60

Total pages

5

Publisher

Elsevier

Place published

France

Language

English

Copyright

© 2017 Elsevier Masson SAS

Former Identifier

2006071097

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2017-03-07

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