4.6 Article

Low-Dose Aspirin Treatment Attenuates Male Rat Salt-Sensitive Hypertension via Platelet Cyclooxygenase 1 and Complement Cascade Pathway

Journal

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1161/JAHA.119.013470

Keywords

aspirin; cyclooxygenase; platelet; salt-sensitive hypertension; vascular endothelium

Funding

  1. Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences Innovation Fund for Medical Sciences (CIFMS) [2016-I2M-1-016, 2019-I2M-1-001]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation (China) [81600334, 81670387, 81800402]
  3. Life Science Society Consortium Youth Talent Promotion Project
  4. National Institutes of Health, USA [R01DK039308, P01HL074940, R01HL092196]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Background The role of platelets in the development of vascular inflammation and endothelial dysfunction in the pathogenesis of hypertension is well established at this time. Aspirin is known to relieve pain, decrease fever, reduce inflammation, impair platelet aggregation, and prevent clotting, yet its effect in the context of salt-sensitive hypertension remains unclear. The present study investigated the importance of aspirin in inhibiting the abnormal activation of platelets and promoting the normal function of the vascular endothelium in a rat model of salt-sensitive hypertension. Method and Results Dahl salt-sensitive rats and salt-resistant rats were fed a normal-salt diet (4% NaCl), a high-salt diet (8% NaCl), or a high-salt diet with aspirin gavage (10 mg/kg per day) for 8 weeks. Blood pressure, platelet activation, vascular function, inflammatory response, and potential mechanism were measured. Low-dose aspirin (10 mg/kg per day) decreased the high-salt diet-induced elevation of blood pressure, platelet activation, leukocyte infiltration, and leukocyte-platelet aggregation (CD45+CD61+), as well as vascular endothelial and renal damage. These effects were related to the ability of aspirin to prevent the adhesion of leukocytes to endothelial cells via inhibition of the platelet cyclooxygenase 1 but not the cyclooxygenase 2 pathway. Aspirin also reversed the high-salt diet-induced abnormal activation of complement and coagulation cascades in platelets. Conclusions These results highlight a new property of aspirin in ameliorating vascular endothelial dysfunction induced by platelet activation, which may be beneficial in the treatment of salt-sensitive hypertension.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available