P. Pickkers et al., In vivo evidence for K-Ca channel opening properties of acetazolamide in the human vasculature, BR J PHARM, 132(2), 2001, pp. 443-450
1 The selective carbonic anhydrase inhibitor acetazolamide is known to incr
ease blood flow in several organs. Acetazolamide directly dilates isolated
resistance arteries associated with activation of calcium-activated potassi
um (K-Ca) channels. We examined both the presence and mechanism of the dire
ct vascular action of acetazolamide in vivo in humans.
2 Forearm vasodilator responses of 30 healthy volunteers to infusion of pla
cebo and increasing doses of acetazolamide (1-3-10 mg min(-1) dl(-1)) into
the brachial artery were recorded by venous occlusion plethysmography, befo
re and after local administration of L-NMMA (0.2 mg min(-1) dl(-1), an inhi
bitor of NO-synthase, n = 6), indomethacin (5.0 mug min(-1) dl(-1), an inhi
bitor of prostaglandin synthesis, n=6), glibenclamide (10 mug min(-1) dl(-1
), an inhibitor of K-ATP channels, n=6), tetraethylammonium (0.1 mg min(-1)
dl(-1), an inhibitor of K-Ca channels, n=6) or placebo (NaCl 0.9%, n = 6).
Lower dosages of acetazolamide did not affect vascular tone (n = 6).
3 Acetazolamide infusions increased forearm blood flow from 2.41+/-0.17 to
2.99+/-0.18, 4.09+/-0.26 and 6.77+/-0.49 mi min(-1) dl(-1) in the infused f
orearm (P < 0.001), with no significant changes in the non-infused forearm,
blood pressure or heart rate. Acetazolamide-induced vasodilation was not i
nhibited by L-NMMA, indomethacin, or glibenclamide but was significantly at
tenuated by TEA (vasodilation: 23 +/- 6, 82 +/- 19, 241 +/- 38% versus 27 /- 8, 44 +/- 22, 42 +/- 35%).
4 We conclude that acetazolamide exerts a direct vasodilator effect in vivo
in humans mediated by vascular K-Ca channel activation. This makes acetazo
lamide the first drug known that specifically modulates this channel.