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Comparative effects of levosimendan, OR-1896, OR-1855, dobutamine, and milrinone on vascular resistance, indexes of cardiac function, and O<sub>2</sub>consumption in dogs
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Citations
41
References
2007
Year
Animal PhysiologyCardiac FunctionVeterinary PhysiologyMolecular PhysiologyMedicinePhysiologyVeterinary ScienceCardiovascular PharmacologySmall Animal Internal MedicineVascular ResistanceComparative EffectsPharmacotherapyExperimental PharmacologyPulse PressurePressure RecoveryAnesthesiaPharmacologyCardiac Contractility
Levosimendan enhances cardiac contractility via Ca(2+) sensitization and induces vasodilation through the activation of ATP-dependent K(+) and large-conductance Ca(2+)-dependent K(+) channels. However, the hemodynamic effects of levosimendan, as well as its metabolites, OR-1896 and OR-1855, relative to plasma concentrations achieved, are not well defined. Thus levosimendan, OR-1896, OR-1855, or vehicle was infused at 0.01, 0.03, 0.1, and 0.3 mumol.kg(-1).30 min(-1), targeting therapeutic to supratherapeutic concentrations of total levosimendan (62.6 ng/ml). Results were compared with those of the beta(1)-agonist dobutamine and the phosphodiesterase 3 inhibitor milrinone. Peak concentrations of levosimendan, OR-1896, and OR-1855 were 455 +/- 21, 126 +/- 6, and 136 +/- 6 ng/ml, respectively. Levosimendan and OR-1896 produced dose-dependent reductions in mean arterial pressure (-31 +/- 2 and -42 +/- 3 mmHg, respectively) and systemic resistance without affecting pulse pressure, effects paralleled by increases in heart rate; OR-1855 produced no effect at any dose tested. Dobutamine, but not milrinone, increased mean arterial pressure and pulse pressure (17 +/- 2 and 23 +/- 2 mmHg, respectively). Regarding potency to elicit reductions in time to peak pressure and time to systolic pressure recovery: OR-1896 > levosimendan > milrinone > dobutamine. Levosimendan and OR-1896 elicited dose-dependent increases in change in pressure over time (118 +/- 10 and 133 +/- 13%, respectively), concomitant with reductions in left ventricular end-diastolic pressure and ejection time. However, neither levosimendan nor OR-1896 produced increases in myocardial oxygen consumption at inotropic and vasodilatory concentrations, whereas dobutamine increased myocardial oxygen consumption (79% above baseline). Effects of the levosimendan and OR-1896 were limited to the systemic circulation; neither compound produced changes in pulmonary pressure, whereas dobutamine produced profound increases (74 +/- 13%). Thus levosimendan and OR-1896 are hemodynamically active in the anesthetized dog at concentrations observed clinically and elicit cardiovascular effects consistent with activation of both K(+) channels and Ca(2+) sensitization, whereas OR-1855 is inactive on endpoints measured in this study.
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