RESUMEN
Primary aldosteronism is the most common cause of secondary hypertension. The first-line treatment adrenalectomy resects adrenal nodules and adjacent normal tissue, limiting suitability to those who present with unilateral disease. Use of thermal ablation represents an emerging approach as a possible minimally invasive therapy for unilateral and bilateral disease, to target and disrupt hypersecreting aldosterone-producing adenomas, while preserving adjacent normal adrenal cortex. To determine the extent of damage to adrenal cells upon exposure to hyperthermia, the steroidogenic adrenocortical cell lines H295R and HAC15 were treated with hyperthermia at temperatures between 37 and 50°C with the effects of hyperthermia on steroidogenesis evaluated following stimulation with forskolin and ANGII. Cell death, protein/mRNA expression of steroidogenic enzymes and damage markers (HSP70/90), and steroid secretion were analyzed immediately and 7 days after treatment. Following treatment with hyperthermia, 42°C and 45°C did not induce cell death and were deemed sublethal doses while ≥50°C caused excess cell death in adrenal cells. Sublethal hyperthermia (45°C) caused a significant reduction in cortisol secretion immediately following treatment while differentially affecting the expression of various steroidogenic enzymes, although recovery of steroidogenesis was evident 7 days after treatment. As such, sublethal hyperthermia, which occurs in the transitional zone during thermal ablation induces a short-lived, unsustained inhibition of cortisol steroidogenesis in adrenocortical cells in vitro.
Asunto(s)
Corteza Suprarrenal , Adenoma Corticosuprarrenal , Hipertermia Inducida , Humanos , Hidrocortisona/metabolismo , Corteza Suprarrenal/metabolismo , Corticoesteroides/metabolismo , Adenoma Corticosuprarrenal/metabolismo , Aldosterona/metabolismoRESUMEN
OBJECTIVE: To investigate and compare the direct effects of compounds used in the treatment of hypertensive disease in pregnancy on human umbilical artery resistance in vitro. METHODS: Isometric tension recordings were performed under physiological conditions on human umbilical arterial rings (n=30). The in vitro effects of labetolol, hydralazine, alpha-methyldopa, nifedepine and magnesium sulphate (at concentration ranges from 1 nanomolar to 1 millimolar), and their respective vehicle controls, were measured. Results were expressed as -logEC50 (pD2) and mean maximal inhibition values for each compound. RESULTS: All compounds investigated, except alpha methyldopa, exerted a significant relaxant effect on umbilical arterial tone. Alpha-methyldopa was significantly less potent when compared to all other compounds (mean maximal inhibition value [20.89+/-7.99%] versus all other agents [range 63.15+/-8.70-84.12+/-3.84%] (P<0.01)). The dose response curve of nifedipine yielded a significantly greater PD2 value when compared to that of hydralazine, labetalol, and magnesium sulphate (PD2 value [5.82+/-0.34] versus the above groups [range 3.10+/-0.09-3.52+/-0.14] (P <0.01)). CONCLUSION: These findings demonstrate that agents commonly used for the treatment of hypertensive disease in pregnancy, excluding alpha-methyldopa, have significant direct effects on the feto-placental circulation. These results suggest that alpha-methyldopa administration during pregnancy is less likely to produce significant direct effects on fetal vasculature then other agents used.