Decreased exhaled nitric oxide in pulmonary arterial hypertension: response to bosentan therapy
- PMID: 15879413
- DOI: 10.1164/rccm.200412-1684OC
Decreased exhaled nitric oxide in pulmonary arterial hypertension: response to bosentan therapy
Abstract
Rationale: Decreased nitric oxide (NO) is considered an important pathogenetic mechanism in pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH), but clear evidence is lacking.
Objectives: We used multiple techniques to assess endogenous NO in 10 patients with untreated PAH (8 idiopathic and 2 anorexigen-associated PAH) and 12 control subjects.
Methods: After a nitrite/nitrate-restricted diet, NO metabolites (NOx) were assayed in 24-hour urine collections and exhaled NO (FE(NO)) determined at multiple expiratory flows. Analysis of the relation between FE(NO) and flow allowed derivation of three flow-independent parameters: airway wall concentration (C(W)), diffusing capacity (D(NO)), and alveolar concentration (C(A)). Seven patients underwent follow-up testing after 3 months of bosentan treatment.
Results: At baseline, FE(NO) was markedly decreased at the two lowest expiratory flows in PAH: 21 +/- 4 versus 36 +/- 4 ppb at 18 ml/second and 11 +/- 2 versus 17 +/- 2 ppb at 50 ml/second, for subjects with PAH and control subjects, respectively (p < 0.05). C(W) was 33 +/- 11 ppb in subjects with PAH versus 104 +/- 34 in control subjects (p = 0.04). Urinary NOx was also reduced in PAH (42 +/- 6 microM NOx/mM creatinine versus 62 +/- 7 in control subjects; p = 0.04). After bosentan, FE(NO), C(W), and urine NOx increased to control values (p < 0.05). Exclusion of the two anorexigen cases did not alter these results.
Conclusions: FE(NO) at low expiratory flows was decreased in PAH due to reduced C(W). Bosentan reversed these abnormalities, suggesting that suppression of NO in PAH may have been caused by endothelin.
Comment in
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A urinary test for pulmonary arterial hypertension?Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2005 Aug 1;172(3):262-3. doi: 10.1164/rccm.2505009. Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2005. PMID: 16040788 No abstract available.
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