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Nephrol Dial Transplant (2000) 15: 988-993
© 2000 European Renal Association-European Dialysis and Transplant Association

Effects of angiotensin II blockade on nitric oxide blood levels in IgA nephropathy

Dario Roccatello1,, Giulio Mengozzi2, Graziella Gigliola3, Daniella Rossi1, Roberto Mosso4, Giovanni Cacace4, Renato Polloni4, Giulio Cesano3, Giuseppe Picciotto4, Luciana Paradisi2, Enrico Bancale5, Giuseppe Piccoli3 and Luigi M. Sena2

1 Centro di Immunopatologia (CMID), Ospedale L. Einaudi, Torino, 2 Dipartimento di Medicina e Oncologia Sperimentale, 3 Istituto di Nefrourologia, Università di Torino, 4 Servizio di Medicina Nucleare, Ospedale S. Giovanni Battista and 5 Laboratorio di Chimica Clinica, Ospedale G. Bosco, Torino, Italy

Background. The effects of renin–angiotensin system blockade on nitric oxide (NO), especially in pathological conditions, are far from being established. The influence of kinins and angiotensin type 2 receptor are largely speculative and based mainly on animal studies. This study was aimed to address these aspects in humans.

Methods. Eight IgA nephropathy patients with documented clinical and histological indicators of poor prognosis were given 50 mg of losartan, 10 mg of enalapril, and 40 mg of the NO donor isosorbide 5 mononitrate (as a control of NO generation) in randomized order for 7 days each. Treatment periods were separated by washout periods of 7 days each. Laboratory investigations were performed before and after each study period. Seven healthy controls received losartan and enalapril according to the same study design.

Results. Glomerular filtration rate remained stable while effective renal plasma flow increased with each treatment (P<0.05). Under losartan and enalapril, filtration fraction fell (P=0.02), plasma renin activity increased (P<0.05) and urinary aldosterone concentration decreased (P=0.02). Angiotensin-converting enzyme activity was reduced to the limit of detection under enalapril (P<0.001). Blood NO, detected as nitrosylhaemoglobin by a recently developed technique of spin-trap electron paramagnetic resonance, increased significantly, as expected, during treatment with isosorbide 5 mononitrate (P=0.01), with enalapril (P<0.05), and also with losartan (P<0.05). Unlike losartan, enalapril significantly reduced albuminuria (P=0.01) in this short-term period. In the seven healthy controls, neither enalapril nor losartan were able to increase blood NO levels significantly.

Conclusions. Blood levels of nitrosylhaemoglobin, a surrogate marker of NO, increased under blockade of the renin–angiotensin system in patients with IgA nephropathy, but not in healthy volunteers. This increase could contribute to changes of effective renal plasma flow in renal disease states.

Keywords: angiotensin receptor antagonists; haemodynamics; IgA nephropathy; nitric oxide

Correspondence and offprint requests to: Dario Roccatello, Centro Multidisciplinare di Immunopatologia (CMID), Ospedale L. Einaudi, V. Cigna 74, I-10152 Torino, Italy.


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