PMID: 8587435Jan 1, 1995Paper

Influence of pulmonary blood pressure and flow on endothelin-1 production in humans

Journal of Cardiovascular Pharmacology
S IshikawaI Yamaguchi

Abstract

To investigate the regulation of endothelin-1 (ET-1) production, cardiac catheterization was performed in young patients with congenital heart disease (27 +/- 5 months old, mean +/- SEM), and plasma levels of ET-1 in the inferior vena cava were measured by a sandwich-enzyme immunoassay. Plasma ET-1 levels of age-matched healthy controls were 1.55 +/- 0.07 pg/ml (n = 6). In patients with atrial septal defect [without pulmonary hypertension (PH)] who had volume but not pressure overload to the pulmonary circulation (PC), plasma ET-1 levels were significantly lower than in controls. In patients with PH due to ventricular septal defect (VSD) who had both volume and pressure overload to PC, the levels were significantly higher than in controls. In patients with PH and severe pulmonary congestion due to pulmonary venous stenosis (PVS), plasma ET-1 levels were significantly higher than in those with VSD, suggesting that ET-1 production is also augmented by pulmonary congestion. The present findings suggest that ET-1 production is increased by pressure overload to PC but decreased by volume overload to PC.

Related Concepts

Related Feeds

Birth Defects

Birth defects encompass structural and functional alterations that occur during embryonic or fetal development and are present since birth. The cause may be genetic, environmental or unknown and can result in physical and/or mental impairment. Here is the latest research on birth defects.