Effect of arsenical drugs on in vitro vascular responses of pulmonary artery from heartworm-infected dogs
- PMID: 9099385
Effect of arsenical drugs on in vitro vascular responses of pulmonary artery from heartworm-infected dogs
Abstract
Objective: To test the effect of thiacetarsamide and melarsomine on vascular responses in isolated rings of pulmonary artery from heartworm-infected dogs.
Animals: 18 heartworm-infected dogs.
Procedure: Isolated rings of pulmonary artery from heartworm-infected dogs were randomly treated with thiacetarsamide (30 micrograms/ml) or melarsomine dihydrochloride (30 micrograms/ml) for 30 minutes; untreated rings from the same dog served as control. Cumulative dose-response relations to norepinephrine, nitroglycerin, and methacholine were determined.
Results: Norepinephrine-induced constriction was not altered by treatment with either thiacetarsamide or melarsomine. Treatment with thiacetarsamide depressed nitroglycerin-induced relaxation, compared with values for untreated control rings and rings treated with melarsomine. Treatment of rings with thiacetarsamide or melarsomine depressed methacholine-induced relaxation, compared with values for untreated rings. Histologic examination of rings indicated that treatment with thiacetarsamide or melarsomine resulted in loss of endothelial cells.
Conclusion: Endothelial cell loss as a direct drug effect may be responsible for impaired endothelium-dependent relaxation in pulmonary artery from heartworm-infected dogs. Thiacetarsamide appears to have additional effects on vascular smooth muscle, which may explain why fewer complications are observed in dogs treated with melarsomine.
Clinical relevance: Melarsomine may be a safer drug than thiacetarsamide and could be a better treatment for dogs with heartworm infection.
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