Urocortin 2 combined with angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibition in experimental heart failure

2008 ◽  
Vol 114 (10) ◽  
pp. 635-642 ◽  
Author(s):  
Miriam T. Rademaker ◽  
Christopher J. Charles ◽  
M. Gary Nicholls ◽  
A. Mark Richards

Ucn2 (urocortin 2) is a recently discovered peptide with therapeutic potential in heart failure. As any new treatment is likely to be used in conjunction with standard ACEI (angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor) therapy, it is important that the combined effects of these agents are assessed. In the present study, we investigated the effects of Ucn2 and an ACEI (captopril) administered for 3 h, both separately and together, in eight sheep with pacing-induced heart failure. Ucn2 and captopril alone both increased CO (cardiac output; Ucn2>captopril) and decreased arterial pressure (captopril>Ucn2), left atrial pressure (Ucn2>captopril) and peripheral resistance (Ucn2=captopril) relative to controls. Compared with either treatment alone, combined treatment further improved CO and reduced peripheral resistance and cardiac preload, without inducing further falls in blood pressure. In contrast with the marked increase in plasma renin activity observed with captopril alone, Ucn2 administration reduced renin activity, whereas the combined agents resulted in intermediate renin levels. All active treatments decreased circulating levels of aldosterone (Ucn2+captopril>Ucn2=captopril), endothelin-1 and the natriuretic peptides (Ucn2+captopril=Ucn2>captopril), whereas adrenaline (epinephrine) fell only with Ucn2 (Ucn2+captopril=Ucn2), and vasopressin increased during captopril alone. Ucn2, both separately and in conjunction with captopril, increased urine output, sodium and creatinine excretion and creatinine clearance. Conversely, captopril administered alone adversely affected these renal indices. In conclusion, co-treatment with Ucn2 and an ACEI in heart failure produced significantly greater improvements in haemodynamics, hormonal profile and renal function than achieved by captopril alone. These results indicate that dual treatment with these two agents is beneficial.

2018 ◽  
Vol 314 (5) ◽  
pp. H1049-H1052 ◽  
Author(s):  
Oscar H. L. Bing

Ammonia plays a central role in the life and death of all living organisms and has been studied for over 100 yr. Ammonia is necessary for growth and development, but it is toxic in excess, and, as a result, differing methods of ammonia neutralization have evolved. After physiological and pathological stress to the heart, tissue ammonia levels rise. Local ammonia neutralization may be inadequate, and excess ammonia may exert its toxic effects. Phenylbutyrate (PBA), which is Federal Drug Administration approved for the treatment of elevated blood ammonia in urea cycle disorders, provides an accessory pathway for ammonia excretion. Recently, PBA has also been found to prevent specific cardiomyopathies. The central theme presents the hypothesis that stress to the myocardium from a variety of environmental sources causes injury, cell death, necrosis, and ammonia production. Ammonia, if not neutralized, exerts downstream toxic effects. Here, data are presented showing that neutralization with PBA alone and PBA combined with angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibition prevent and reverse pathophysiology associated with specific cardiomyopathies. NEW & NOTEWORTHY Ammonia produced after myocardial injury is hypothesized to be an upstream stress contributing to the pathophysiology of heart failure, effects that may be attenuated by a documented ammonia-reducing treatment. Reversal of heart failure can be achieved using an angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor combined with an ammonia-reducing treatment.


1981 ◽  
Vol 61 (s7) ◽  
pp. 281s-283s ◽  
Author(s):  
H. Gavras ◽  
J. Biollaz ◽  
B. Waeber ◽  
H. R. Brunner ◽  
Gavras Irene ◽  
...  

1. The effects of the new oral angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitor MK-421 on blood pressure, plasma renin activity, angiotensin II, aldosterone and converting enzyme activity were assessed in 16 hypertensive patients followed for 6–18 weeks. 2. After an initial titration period, maintenance doses of 2.5–40 mg once daily produced satisfactory blood pressure control in 11 and a partial but significant decrease in the remainder. 3. Treatment was associated with no change in heart rate and no orthostatic hypotension. At 24 h after the first effective dose, blood pressure was still decreased, plasma ACE was suppressed to 16% of the baseline, plasma angiotensin to 58%, aldosterone to 42%, and plasma renin activity was elevated to 228% of the baseline. 4. Magnitude of blood pressure fall was significantly correlated with the height of pretreatment blood pressure but not with baseline levels of plasma renin activity.


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