Open Access
The combination of atenolol and amlodipine is better than their monotherapy for preventing end‐organ damage in different types of hypertension in rats
Author(s) -
Han Ping,
Shen FuMing,
Xie HeHui,
Chen YuanYuan,
Miao ChaoYu,
Mehta Jawahar L.,
Sassard Jean,
Su DingFeng
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
journal of cellular and molecular medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.44
H-Index - 130
eISSN - 1582-4934
pISSN - 1582-1838
DOI - 10.1111/j.1582-4934.2008.00365.x
Subject(s) - atenolol , amlodipine , blood pressure , medicine , baroreflex , pharmacology , calcium channel blocker , combination therapy , end organ damage , kidney , urology , anesthesia , cardiology , heart rate
Abstract Combinations therapy is often used in hypertensive patients whether combination therapy is necessary for preventing end‐organ damage is not known. The objective of this study was to determine in four different hypertensive animal models the necessity of adding the calcium channel blocker amlodipine to therapy with the ß‐blocker atenolol to modulate end‐organ damage. Spontaneously hypertensive rats, DOCA‐salt hypertensive rats, two‐kidney, one‐clip renovascular hypertensive rats and Lyon genetically hypertensive rats were used to study this objective. These animal models have different sensitivities to atenolol and amlodipine. The dosages of therapy employed were 10 mg/kg atenolol alone, 1 mg/kg amlodipine, 10 mg atenolol + 1 mg/kg amlodipine and 5 mg/kg atenolol+0.5 mg/kg amlodipine. BP was continuously recorded in all animals. After determination of baroreflex sensitivity, rats were sacrificed for end‐organ damage evaluation. The combination of amlodipine and atenolol had a synergistic inhibitory effect on blood pressure and blood pressure variability, and end‐organ damage as compared with monotherapy with atenolol or amlodipine in all animal models. Baroreflex sensitivity also improved with the combination therapy more than with monotherapy. In conclusion, atenolol and amlodipine combination exerts a superior effect on blood pressure, blood pressure variability, baroreflex sensitivity and end‐organ damage. The superior effect of the combination was observed in all four models of hypertension.