Objectives: It is well established that angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors (ACEI) reduce blood pressure (BP) and hypertrophy of the left ventricle and vessels. The aim of our study was to compare chemically different ACEIs regarding their ability to modulate left ventricular and media hypertrophy, ACE activity and plasma endothelin-1 concentrations in spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHRs).
Design: After establishing equi-effective dose regimes, SHRs were treated (3 months) with captopril, enalapril, fosinopril or ramipril (2 x 25, 10, 20 or 1 mg/kg per day or corresponding 1% doses for studying blood pressure-independent effects).
Methods and results: Systolic blood pressure was reduced in SHRs receiving high doses of captopril, enalapril, fosinopril or ramipril (-61, -54, -35 and -47 mmHg), whereas low doses were ineffective. Left ventricular weight was decreased in animals treated with high doses (captopril/enalapril/fosinopril/ramipril: -17/-19/-17/-19%), but not low doses of agents. Media thickness of thoracal aorta was reduced by administering high doses (captopril/enalapril/fosinopril/ramipril: -31/-32/-27/-26%) and low doses (-16/-22/-22/-19%) of agents. ACE activity was reduced in heart, aorta and kidney of rats treated with high and low doses of all ACE inhibitors, whereby high doses showed more pronounced effects. Plasma endothelin-1 concentrations were not altered. A blood-pressure-ineffective treatment with an AT -antagonist revealed similar effects on cardiovascular hypertrophy.
Conclusions: ACEIs reduce cardiovascular hypertrophy uniformly via an AT -receptor- mediated mechanism, reinforcing the opinion that ACEI effects are indeed class effects. The significance of local renin-angiotensin systems was confirmed by antihypertrophic effects in the aorta that were apparent in the absence of any blood pressure reduction.