4.5 Article

Chronic low alcohol intake during pregnancy programs sex-specific cardiovascular deficits in rats

Journal

BIOLOGY OF SEX DIFFERENCES
Volume 10, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s13293-019-0235-9

Keywords

Fetal programming; Alcohol; Blood pressure; Vascular function

Funding

  1. National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia [511162]

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BackgroundExposure to an adverse environment in early life can have lifelong consequences for risk of cardiovascular disease. Maternal alcohol (ethanol) intake is common and associated with a variety of harmful effects to the fetus. However, examining the effects on the cardiovascular system in adult offspring has largely been neglected. The objectives of this study were to investigate the influence of chronic, low ethanol consumption throughout pregnancy on blood pressure, vascular reactivity and wall stiffness, all key determinants of cardiovascular health, in both male and female rat offspring.MethodsFemale Sprague-Dawley rats were fed an ad libitum liquid diet 6% vol/vol ethanol throughout pregnancy. Male and female offspring were studied at 12months of age. Arterial pressure, heart rate and locomotor activity were measured over 7days via radiotelemetry. Renal lobar arteries were isolated and studied using wire and pressure myography.ResultsBasal mean arterial pressure in female ethanol-exposed rats was reduced by similar to 5-6mmHg compared to control female offspring, whereas arterial pressure was unaffected in male offspring. Ethanol-exposed offspring had an attenuated pressor response to an acute restraint stress, with this effect most evident in females. Renal artery function was not affected by prenatal ethanol exposure.Conclusions We show for the first time that low level chronic maternal alcohol intake during pregnancy influences arterial pressure in adult offspring in the absence of fetal growth restriction.

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