Objective: Nitric oxide is a vasodilating and blood pressure lowering substance. To investigate whether calcium antagonists or angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors increase vascular nitric oxide activity, we assessed systemic and renal vascular sensitivity to nitric oxide synthase inhibition in hypertensives on and off medication.
Methods: Ten essential hypertensive patients, aged 22-51 years, were studied 3 times: > or = 4 weeks off medication, after 3 weeks treatment with enalapril 20 mg twice a day and after 3 weeks nifedipine 60 mg/day. Each time, 24-h blood pressure registration was performed, followed by a clearance study to obtain a 3-h dose-response curve for intravenously infused NG-monomethyl-L-arginine (L-NMMA, respectively 0.75, 1.5 and 3.0 mg/kg/h).
Results: L-NMMA dose-dependently increased mean arterial pressure with 5 +/- 2 mmHg and systemic vascular resistance with 24 +/- 5% at maximum dose, whereas cardiac output decreased (all P < 0.001). Enalapril and nifedipine treatment decreased blood pressure, while the L-NMMA-induced increase in systemic vascular resistance was potentiated (enalapril: 45 +/- 7% and nifedipine: 46 +/- 8%; both P < 0.01). L-NMMA also dose-dependently decreased renal blood flow by 58 +/- 8% at maximum dose (P < 0.001), but neither drug potentiated these effects.
Conclusion: These results indicate that, in essential hypertensives, antihypertensive therapy with enalapril or nifedipine increases nitric oxide dependency of systemic vascular tone, which may play a role in the blood pressure lowering effect of these drugs. However, this phenomenon cannot be observed in the renal circulation, suggesting a different regulation of endothelium-dependent vasomotion in the hypertensive kidney.