Women who develop preeclampsia during pregnancy are more likely to develop and die of cardiovascular disease later in life, even if they are otherwise healthy. The reason why this occurs is unclear but may be related to blood vessel damage and increased inflammation that occurs during the preeclamptic pregnancy and persists postpartum. The purpose of this investigation is to determine the mechanisms contributing to this lasting blood vessel damage and to test whether taking a medication that blocks angiotensin II receptors (losartan) decrease these negative effects in women who have had preeclampsia. Identification of these mechanisms and treatment strategies may lead to better clinical management,of cardiovascular disease risk in these women. In this study we use the blood vessels in the skin as a representative vascular bed. Using a minimally invasive technique (intradermal microdialysis for the local delivery of pharmaceutical agents) we examine the blood vessels in a nickle-sized area of the skin in women who have had preeclampsia. We make these measurements after the subjects take a placebo and after they take losartan (an angiotensin II receptor blocker) to test whether this treatment improves vascular function in these women. As a compliment to these measurements, we also draw blood from the subjects and isolate the inflammatory cells to test how sensitive their inflammatory responses are following the placebo and the losartan treatment.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
BASIC_SCIENCE
Masking
TRIPLE
Enrollment
11
subjects ingest 50mg losartan potassium tablet daily for 6 weeks
subjects ingest placebo tablet daily for 6 weeks
University of Iowa
Iowa City, Iowa, United States
Cutaneous Conductance (%Maximum) Response to Acetylcholine
Cutaneous vascular vasodilator response to exogenous acetylcholine perfusion; measured with laser-Doppler flowmetry during intradermal microdialysis delivery of acetylcholine alone or co-infused with L-NAME. Cutaneous conductance is calculated (laser-Doppler flux/mean arterial pressure) and normalized to site specific maximal dilation (%maximum).
Time frame: immediately following 6 weeks of oral treatment (losartan or placebo)
Cutaneous Conductance (%Baseline) Response to Angiotensin II
Cutaneous vascular constrictor response to exogenous ang II perfusion; measured by laser-Doppler flowmetry during intradermal microdialysis delivery of angiotensin II. Cutaneous conductance is calculated (laser-Doppler flux/mean arterial pressure) and normalized to site-specific baseline conductance (%baseline) measured on the study day before the perfusion of angiotensin II.
Time frame: immediately following 6 weeks of oral treatment (losartan or placebo)
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