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Cyclooxygenase 2 contributes to bradykinin-induced microvascular responses in peripheral arterioles after cardiopulmonary bypass.

BACKGROUND: Diabetic patients are associated with impaired peripheral microvascular function after cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) and cardiac surgery. We hypothesized that upregulation of the inducible cyclooxygenase 2 (COX-2) contributes to altered microvascular reactivity of peripheral arterioles in diabetic patients undergoing CPB and cardiac surgery.

METHODS: Skeletal muscle samples of nondiabetic (ND) patients and patients with diabetes mellitus (DM; n = 8 per group) undergoing cardiac surgery were harvested before and after CPB. The protein expression/localization of COX-2 was assayed by Western blotting and immunohistochemistry. Peripheral arterioles were dissected from the harvested skeletal muscle tissue samples, the isolated arterioles (80-180 μm) were cannulated and pressurized, and changes in diameter were measured with video microscopy. In-vitro relaxation responses of precontracted arterioles were examined in the presence of the endothelium-dependent vasodilator bradykinin (10-10 to 10-6 M) and in the presence or absence of the selective COX-2 inhibitor NS398 (10-5 M).

RESULTS: The post-CPB protein levels of the inducible COX-2 were significantly increased compared with pre-CPB values in both the ND and DM groups (P < 0.05), whereas, this increase was higher in DM than that of ND (P < 0.05). In the DM arterioles, not the ND vessels, bradykinin-induced relaxation response was inhibited in the presence of the specific COX-2 inhibitor NS398 at baseline (P < 0.05). After CPB, bradykinin-induced relaxation response of the ND and DM arterioles was inhibited in the presence of the specific COX-2 inhibitor NS398, but this effect was more pronounced in the diabetic patients (P < 0.05).

CONCLUSIONS: Diabetes and CPB are associated with upregulation in COX-2 expression/activation in human peripheral microvasculature. This alteration may lead to altered peripheral microvascular reactivity in diabetic patients undergoing cardiac surgery.

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