Discrepancy between antihypertensive effect and angiotensin converting enzyme inhibition by captopril


Autoria(s): Waeber B.; Brunner H. R.; Brunner D. B.; Curtet A. L.; Turini G. A.; Gavras H.
Data(s)

1980

Resumo

Captopril, an inhibitor of angiotensin converting enzyme, was administered twice daily to 13 hypertensive patients for a mean period of 9 weeks. Continuous blood pressure control in the ambulatory patients was established with a portable blood pressure recorder. Notwithstanding, in eight patients with normal renal function, plasma converting enzyme was found to resume normal activity before administration of the morning dose of captopril. Only in 5 patients with impaired renal function did some blockade of plasma converting enzyme persist for more than 12 hours. Measured plasma converting enzyme activity seemed to reflect total conversion of angiotensin I, including conversion in the pulmonary vascular bed, since changes in its activity were closely paralled by changes in plasma aldosterone levels. Bradykinin accumulation seems unlikely when converting enzyme and thus, presumably, kininase II has resumed normal activity. Captopril administration does not seem to alter plasma epinephrine or norepinephrine levels. Blood pressure reduction in the face of normal angiotensin converting enzyme activity is probably due to hyporesponsiveness of the arterioles to pressor hormones, which may be due to specific renin-related and/or nonspecific effects of captopril.

Identificador

http://serval.unil.ch/?id=serval:BIB_2B37F3472905

pmid:6247269

isbn:0194-911X

isiid:A1980JK03200017

Idioma(s)

en

Fonte

Hypertension, vol. 2, no. 2, pp. 236-42

Palavras-Chave #AdultAldosterone/*bloodBlood Pressure/drug effectsCaptopril/*pharmacology/therapeutic useFemaleHumansHypertension/drug therapyMaleMiddle AgedPeptidyl-Dipeptidase A/*bloodProline/*analogs & derivativesRenin/*blood
Tipo

info:eu-repo/semantics/article

article