Felipe Tonon Firmino, Pollyana Peixoto, Thatiany Jardim Batista, Leonardo da Silva Escouto, Girlandia Alexandre Brasil, Mariana Dos Reis Couto, Antonio Ferreira de Melo Júnior, Nazaré Souza Bissoli
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High dose of liraglutide impairs renal function in female hypertensive rats.
Glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) receptor agonists exhibit beneficial cardiovascular effects. However, the renal effects of different doses of liraglutide in an essential hypertension model have not yet been investigated. SHR female rats were treated for 30 days, twice a day, with saline (control) or liraglutide at low (0.06 mg/kg, LL) and high (0.6 mg/kg, LH) doses. Volume intake and excretion were monitored for a period of 24h. In renal tissue, nitrite-NO2-, nitrate-NO3-, advanced protein oxidation products-AOPP, collagen deposition, creatinine (Cr), urea (U), sodium, and potassium were analyzed. liraglutide reduced body weight gain in both groups. However, in the high dose, it increased urinary volume excretion and sodium/potassium ratio. Both doses reduced the urinary U/Cr ratio and LH increased the serum U/Cr ratio. AOPP was reduced only in LL. LH augmented collagen and early markers of kidney injury (blood urea nitrogen-BUN, BUN/Cr). LH increased NO3-, reduced NO2-, and caused an aberrant increase in GFR. Both doses' effects were independent of blood pressure and glycemic control. liraglutide appears to have distinct effects on the hypertensive female kidney depending on the dose, with higher doses impairing kidney function.
期刊介绍:
Journal of Cardiovascular Pharmacology is a peer reviewed, multidisciplinary journal that publishes original articles and pertinent review articles on basic and clinical aspects of cardiovascular pharmacology. The Journal encourages submission in all aspects of cardiovascular pharmacology/medicine including, but not limited to: stroke, kidney disease, lipid disorders, diabetes, systemic and pulmonary hypertension, cancer angiogenesis, neural and hormonal control of the circulation, sepsis, neurodegenerative diseases with a vascular component, cardiac and vascular remodeling, heart failure, angina, anticoagulants/antiplatelet agents, drugs/agents that affect vascular smooth muscle, and arrhythmias.
Appropriate subjects include new drug development and evaluation, physiological and pharmacological bases of drug action, metabolism, drug interactions and side effects, application of drugs to gain novel insights into physiology or pathological conditions, clinical results with new and established agents, and novel methods. The focus is on pharmacology in its broadest applications, incorporating not only traditional approaches, but new approaches to the development of pharmacological agents and the prevention and treatment of cardiovascular diseases. Please note that JCVP does not publish work based on biological extracts of mixed and uncertain chemical composition or unknown concentration.