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1 Department of Clinical Pharmacology, 3 Institute of Medical Physics, and 2 Department of Ophthalmology, University of Vienna School of Medicine, A-1090 Vienna, Austria
Carbon dioxide is an important regulator of vascular
tone. Glibenclamide, an inhibitor of ATP-sensitive potassium channel (KATP) activation, significantly blunts vasodilation in
response to hypercapnic acidosis in animals. We investigated whether
glibenclamide also alters the cerebral and ocular vasodilator response
to hypercapnia in humans. Ten healthy male subjects were studied in a
controlled, randomized, double-blind two-way crossover study under
normoxic and hypercapnic conditions. Glibenclamide (5 mg po) or insulin (0.3 mU · kg
1 · min
1
iv) were administered with glucose to achieve comparable plasma insulin
levels. In control experiments, five healthy volunteers received
glibenclamide (5 mg) or nicorandil (40 mg) or glibenclamide and
nicorandil in a randomized, three-way crossover study. Mean blood flow
velocity and resistive index in the middle cerebral artery (MCA) and in
the ophthalmic artery (OA) were measured with Doppler sonography.
Pulsatile choroidal blood flow was assessed with laser interferometric
measurement of fundus pulsation. Forearm blood flow was measured with
venous occlusion plethysmography. Hypercapnia increased ocular fundus
pulsation amplitude by +18.2-22.3% (P < 0.001) and mean
flow velocity in the MCA by +27.4-33.3% (P < 0.001),
but not in the OA (2.1-6.5%, P = 0.2). Forearm blood flow
increased by 78.2% vs. baseline (P = 0.041) after nicorandil administration. Glibenclamide did not alter hypercapnia-induced changes
in cerebral or ocular hemodynamics and did not affect systemic
hemodynamics or forearm blood flow but significantly increased glucose
utilization and blunted the nicorandil-induced vasodilation in the
forearm. This suggests that hypercapnia-induced changes in the vascular
beds under study are not mediated by activation of KATP
channels in humans.
cerebral blood flow; ocular blood flow; adenosine 5'-triphosphate-sensitive potassium channels
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