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The blockade of angiotensin AT 1 and aldosterone receptors protects rats from synthetic androgen‐induced cardiac autonomic dysfunction
Author(s) -
Marques Neto S. R.,
Silva A. da H.,
Santos M. C. P. dos,
Ferraz E. F.,
Nascimento J. H. M.
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
acta physiologica
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.591
H-Index - 116
eISSN - 1748-1716
pISSN - 1748-1708
DOI - 10.1111/apha.12056
Subject(s) - losartan , spironolactone , medicine , endocrinology , aldosterone , heart rate variability , qt interval , angiotensin ii , renin–angiotensin system , mexiletine , cardiology , heart rate , receptor , blood pressure
Aim This study aimed to evaluate the combined effects of exercise and antagonists of the angiotensin II and aldosterone receptors on cardiac autonomic regulation and ventricular repolarization in rats chronically treated with nandrolone decanoate ( ND ), a synthetic androgen. Methods Thirty male Wistar rats were divided into six groups: sedentary, trained, ND ‐treated, trained and ND ‐treated, trained and treated with both ND and spironolactone, and trained and treated with both ND and losartan. ND (10 mg kg −1 weekly) and the antagonists (20 mg kg −1 daily) of the angiotensin II AT 1 (losartan) and aldosterone (spironolactone) receptors were administered for 8 weeks. Exercise training was performed using a treadmill five times each week for 8 weeks. Following this 8‐week training and treatment period, electrocardiogram recordings were obtained to determine the time and frequency domains of heart rate variability ( HRV ) and corrected QT interval ( QT c). Results Nandrolone decanoate treatment increased the QTc interval and reduced the parasympathetic indexes of HRV (RMSSD, pNN 5 and high‐frequency power) in sedentary and trained rats. The ratio between low‐ and high‐frequency power (LF/HF) was higher in ND‐treated groups. Both losartan and spironolactone treatments prevented the effects of ND on the QTc interval and the HRV parameters (RMSSD, pNN 5, high‐frequency power, and the LF/HF ratio). Conclusion Our results show that chronic treatment with a high dose of ND induces cardiac parasympathetic dysfunction and disturbances in ventricular repolarization in both sedentary and exercised rats. Furthermore, inhibiting the renin‐angiotensin‐aldosterone system using losartan, or spironolactone, prevented these deleterious effects.