Abstrakt: |
The angiotensin I-converting enzyme (CE) inhibitors, trandolapril (RU 44570) and enalapril were administered for 2 weeks to SHR at doses (3 and 10 mg/kg/ day, p.o., respectively) that produced important and comparable inhibitions of plasma (84 and 88), aorta (97 and 88), and atrium (89 and 82) CE activities. At these doses, the inhibitory effects of trandolapril and enalapril were nonetheless different on CE in heart ventricle (58 and 72) and kidney (45 and 85). In addition, although both drugs reduced blood pressure (BP) and heart hypertrophy, trandolapril was more potent despite a lower dose-ratio. All these parameters were reexamined 1, 3, and 8 days after drug withdrawal: BP returned to control levels within 3 days in enalapril-treated rats, whereas it remained low for at least 8 days in trandolapril-treated animals. The reduction of heart hypertrophy owing to trandolapril was still present 8 days after drug discontinuation. On cessation of treatment, plasma CE increased above controls, ventricle CE returned to control levels within 3 days, whereas atrial and aortic CE activities remained inhibited for 8 days in the enalapril group. In contrast, in trandolapril-treated rats, CE activities in serum and tissues were still inhibited after 8 days. These results demonstrate that at the doses used trandolapril is more potent and longer acting than enalapril. |