6533b82bfe1ef96bd128d886
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Chronic Administration of Quercetin Induces Biomechanical and Pharmacological Remodeling in the Rat Coronary Arteries
Anna Monori-kissF. KissEmil MonosGyörgy L. NádasyJ. M. RestifoJ. M. Restifosubject
Male0301 basic medicinemedicine.medical_specialtyPhysiologyVasodilator AgentsLumen (anatomy)Vascular Remodeling030204 cardiovascular system & hematologyBody weightDrug Administration ScheduleNitric oxide03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compoundCoronary circulation0302 clinical medicineInternal medicinemedicineAnimalsRats WistarNo releaseGeneral MedicineCoronary VesselsRatsVasodilationCoronary arteries030104 developmental biologyEndocrinologymedicine.anatomical_structurechemistryQuercetinQuercetinEx vivodescription
Acute dilation brought about by the dietary flavonoid quercetin in coronary arterioles has been described earlier, but no information is available on its chronic effects. Male Wistar rats (body weight about 190 g) were divided to two groups: the quercetin-treated group (n=22) had quercetin supplementation of approximately 30 mg/kg/day, whereas the control group (n=20) had none. After eight weeks of treatment, intramural coronary arterioles with identical passive diameters (178+/-14 microm and 171+/-9 microm) were prepared and their biomechanics and pharmacological reactivities were tested using pressure arteriography ex vivo. The spontaneous tone of quercetin-treated arteries was higher (16.5+/-1.9 % vs. 12.9+/-0.9 %), which resulted in a reduced lumen size (144+/-9 microm vs. 167+/-12 microm), thicker vascular wall (22.6+/-1.8 microm vs. 17.4+/-1.6 microm) and decreased tangential wall stress (16.8+/-1.1 kPa vs. 20.5+/-1.6 kPa) in supplemented animals (in spontaneous tone at 50 mm Hg, p<0.01 in all these comparisons). Elevated basal NO release resulted in increased endothelial dilation in quercetin-treated animals, especially at higher intraluminal pressures (10.8+/-2.5 % vs. 5.7+/-1.3 % at 70 mm Hg, p<0.01). We found remodeling of the geometry of coronary arterioles to ensure higher dilatory reserve and nitrogen monoxide production, as well as lowered elastic stress of the vessel wall.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
---|---|---|---|---|
2017-08-15 | Physiological Research |