IUPS/APS Newsroom March 29-April 6
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Viagra Yields Benefits To
Mother And Fetus In Hypertensive Pregnancy: Improved Maternal Vascular
Function, Offspring Weight Seen; Mortality Cut; Selective Effect in
Pregnancy/Hypertension Called “Intriguing”
San Diego (April 3, 2005) – The first study to consider
the effect of Viagra (sildenafil) during pregnancy affected by hypertension
on such significant facts as fetal growth and well-being and the mother’s
uterine circulation yielded surprisingly positive results, which may
indicate possible utility in preeclampsia, the leading cause of maternal
mortality and morbidity worldwide.
Although Viagra didn’t actually lower mothers’ blood
pressure, “it did produce some very significant and beneficial effects on
pregnancy-induced vascular adaptation and fetal outcome,” according to
senior author/laboratory head, George Osol, professor and director of
research, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of Vermont
College of Medicine, Burlington.
*Paper presentation: “Beneficial effects of
Viagra on fetal and vascular parameters in hypertensive pregnancy in the
rat,” 12:30 p.m.-3 p.m. Tuesday April 5, Physiology 909.9/board #A134. On
view 7:30 a.m. - 4 p.m. Research was performed by George Osol, Gerard
Celia and Natalia I. Gokina, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology,
University of Vermont College of Medicine, with the assistance of lab
technician Keara McElroy-Yaggy.
Osol and his team are presenting the research at the
35th Congress of the International Union of Physiological Sciences in San
Diego, March 31 - April 5, 2005.
Osol said that when given to pregnant rats with
induced hypertension, Viagra:
1. Helped arteries of the uterus grow as they should
during pregnancy. “Hypertension decreases the growth and alters
contractility of blood vessels in the uterus,” Osol said, “but giving Viagra
reversed these effects, resulting in improved function of the uterine
circulation." Arterial diameters of Viagra-treated animals didn’t quite
match control (normal) values, “but were significantly larger than those
with hypertension, suggesting that it may have increased blood flow to the
uterus and placenta,” Osol added.
2. Increased fetal weights to normal values, compared
with untreated hypertensive offspring whose weights were reduced by more
than 20%. “This observation also supports an effect on uterine blood flow
since it well known that restriction of uterine blood flow during pregnancy
is associated with reduced fetal weight, which is a serious clinical
problem,” Osol added.
3. “Third, and most surprisingly, Viagra completely
prevented fetal resorption, or fetal mortality. Whereas 11% (6/52) of
fetuses were lost in the hypertensive group, none were lost in the group
that received Viagra, even though they were still hypertensive,” Osol said.
Selective effect of Viagra in pregnancy/hypertension
called intriguing, “preliminary”
Urging caution, Osol noted that further study is needed
to better understand how and why Viagra aids maternal uterine vascular
adaptation and fetal health; whether similar benefits will occur in humans
and whether there might be any harmful effects.
Nevertheless, Osol said the findings being reported
“are exciting because they suggest that Viagra (or other drugs that inhibit
PDE-5, the enzyme that normally inhibits blood vessels’ ability to expand)
may have beneficial effects in hypertensive pregnancy and, possibly,
preeclampsia. It is also intriguing that the benefits of Viagra were
observed without any reduction in maternal blood pressure, thereby
dissociating hypertension per se from the loss of NO (nitrous oxide)
signaling in the uterine circulation.”
Avoiding current antihypertensive therapy
complications in pregnancy?
Osol pointed out that “this is an important
distinction, because it demonstrates a selective effect of Viagra on the
uteroplacental circulation and avoids some of the complications of
antihypertensive therapy during pregnancy, particularly the danger of
reducing uteroplacental blood flow (placental underperfusion) secondary to
the reduction of systemic blood pressure.”
Hypertensive pregnancy develops in about 10% of women,
disrupting normal vascular adaptation. During normal pregnancy, arteries
that supply the uterus with blood enlarge, allowing uterine blood flow to
increase more than 10-fold in humans, facilitating nourishment of the fetus
and ensuring sufficient blood supply to the uterus during labor. This
vascular adaptation during pregnancy is characteristic of mammals, including
humans, sheep, pigs and rats.
Next steps. Based on these provocative results,
future studies will evaluate the effects of Viagra on uterine blood flow
changes during pregnancy, and “possible changes in other systems that
contribute to normal fetal growth and development, such as placental
transport and immune function,” Osol said.
Funding. The National Institutes of Health
funded this research.
***
The 35th Congress of the International Union of
Physiological Sciences is in San Diego, March 31 - April 5, 2005. The
Congress (http://www.iups2005.org/)
is organized by the six member societies of the U.S. National Committee of
the IUPS,
the American Physiological Society,
the Society for Neuroscience,
the Microcirculatory Society,
the Society of General Physiologists,
the Biomedical Engineering Society, and
the Society for Integrative and Comparative Biology, under the auspices
of the U.S. National Academy of Sciences.
The IUPS conference, held every four years, runs
concurrently this year with Experimental Biology 2005 at the San Diego
Convention Center.
The American Physiological Society (APS), which is
hosting IUPS, was founded in 1887 to foster basic and applied science, much
of it relating to human health. The Bethesda, MD-based Society has more than
10,000 members and publishes nearly 4,000 articles every year in its 14
peer-reviewed journals. In May, APS received the Presidential Award
for Excellence in Science, Mathematics and Engineering Mentoring (PAESMEM).
***
Editor’s Note: For further information or to
schedule an interview with a member of the research team, please contact
Donna Krupa at the IUPS/APS newsroom @ 619.525.6228 (March 31-April
6), or (703) 967-2751 (cell) or (301) 634-7209 (office), or Stacy Brooks at
240.432.9697 (cell) or 301.634.7253 (office).
A searchable online program for IUPS and EB is at
http://www.faseb.org/meetings/eb2005/call/default.htm