The overall goal of this project is to examine in humans the role of nitric
oxide (NO) in three aspects of normal myocardial and vascular regulation,
and to test the general hypothesis that abnormalities of NO regulation
contribute to the pathophysiology of patients with congestive heart failure
(CHF). NO's role as a paracrine autacoid regulator of vascular tone is
well appreciated, and increasing evidence now implicates abnormalities of
NO-dependent regulation of the systemic and coronary vasculature in CHF.
In normal myocardium, NO elaborated by microvascular endothelial cells an
myocytes may affect cardiac myocyte function by modulating beta-adrenergic
and muscarinic cholinergic responses. In certain pathologic states,
cytokine-induced overexpression of myocardial NO may depress systolic and
diastolic function. There is now reason to believe that abnormal NO
regulation may contribute to several incompletely understood aspects of the
pathophysiology of CHF. We will use local intracoronary and intrapulmonary
artery infusions of NG-monomethyl-1-arginine (:L-NMMA), an inhibitor of NOS
alone and in conjunction with a variety of chemical and physiologic
stimuli, to address the role of NO in humans with CHF due to idiopathic and
ischemic dilated cardiomyopathy, myocarditis and human immunodeficiency
virus-related myocarditis/cardiomyopathy. For comparison, we will study
humans with normal myocardial hemodynamic function. We will focus on three
areas that have not previously been addressed in humans. In Specific Aim
1, we will test the hypotheses that 1) No plays a role in modulating basal
and autonomically-mediated changes in systolic and diastolic myocardial
function in normal humans, and 2) abnormal regulation of cardiac NO
contributes to left ventricular dysfunction in patients with CHF due to
several etiologies. In Specific Aim 2, we will test the hypotheses that 1)
NO plays a role in metabolic coronary resistance vessel regulation in
normal humans, and 2) abnormal NO regulation contributes to reduced
metabolic stimulation of coronary blood flow in patients with idiopathic
dilated cardiomyopathy. In Specific Aim 3, we will utilize a novel
approach for the direct assessment of pulmonary vascular tone to test the
hypotheses that 1) NO plays a role in regulating pulmonary vascular tone in
normal humans, and 2) abnormal NO-dependent vasodilator function
contributes to pulmonary hypertension in patients with CHF at rest and with
increased pulmonary blood flow.
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