Concepedia

Publication | Closed Access

Age-Related Reduction of NO Availability and Oxidative Stress in Humans

646

Citations

25

References

2001

Year

TLDR

Age‑related endothelial dysfunction may arise from alterations in the L‑arginine‑NO pathway and increased oxidative stress in both normotensive and hypertensive individuals. The study measured forearm blood flow responses to sodium nitroprusside and acetylcholine in 47 normotensive and 49 hypertensive subjects, repeating acetylcholine with the NO synthase inhibitor L‑NMMA, vitamin C, or both. Acetylcholine‑induced vasodilation declined with age in both groups, was lower in hypertensives, and the NO system dysfunction precedes oxidative stress; vitamin C improved vasodilation only in subjects over 60 years and restored NO responsiveness in older hypertensives.

Abstract

Age-related endothelial dysfunction could be caused by an alteration in the L-arginine-NO system and the production of oxidative stress in both normotensive and hypertensive individuals. In 47 normotensive subjects and 49 patients with essential hypertension, we evaluated forearm blood flow (by strain-gauge plethysmography) modifications induced by intrabrachial sodium nitroprusside (1, 2, and 4 microg/100 mL per minute) and acetylcholine (0.15, 0.45, 1.5, 4.5, and 15 microg/100 mL per minute), an endothelium-independent vasodilator and an endothelium-dependent vasodilator, respectively. Acetylcholine was repeated in the presence of the NO synthase inhibitor N(G)-monomethyl-L-arginine (L-NMMA, 100 microg/100 mL per minute), the antioxidant vitamin C (8 mg/100 mL per minute), or both. Vasodilation to acetylcholine, but not to sodium nitroprusside, was lower (P<0.01) in hypertensive patients compared with control subjects. Moreover, in both groups, endothelium-dependent vasodilation declined with aging. In normotensive subjects, the inhibiting effect of L-NMMA on response to acetylcholine decreased in parallel with advancing age, whereas vitamin C increased vasodilation to acetylcholine in only the oldest group (age >60 years). In young hypertensive patients (age <30 years), vasodilation to acetylcholine was sensitive to L-NMMA, whereas in hypertensive patients age >30 years, vitamin C enhanced endothelium-dependent vasodilation and restored the inhibiting effect of L-NMMA on response to acetylcholine. In normotensive individuals, an earlier primary dysfunction of the NO system and a later production of oxidative stress cause age-related reduction in endothelium-dependent vasodilation. These alterations are similar but anticipated in hypertensive patients compared with normotensive subjects.

References

YearCitations

Page 1