K+ channel-opening action contributes to the preventive effects of nicorandil on U46619-induced vasoconstriction of canine large coronary arteries in vivo.

1996 
: The antispasmogenic effects of nicorandil on epicardial coronary artery vasoconstriction were compared with those of a K+ channel opener, cromakalim, and a nitrovasodilator, nitroglycerin, in open-chest dogs. Intracoronary administration of U46619 (0.5-1.0 micrograms), a stable thromboxane A2 analogue, reduced the external diameter of the left circumflex coronary artery with no marked alternations in systemic hemodynamics. This U46619-induced vasoconstriction of large epicardial coronary arteries was dose-dependently prevented by the intracoronary infusion of nicorandil (1-10 micrograms/kg/min), cromakalim (0.03 micrograms/kg/min) and nitroglycerin (1 micrograms/kg/min). After pretreatment with glibenclamide (3 mg/kg, i.v.), and ATP-sensitive K+ channel blocker, these effects of nicorandil and cromakalim were inhibited significantly, whereas the response to nitroglycerin remained unchanged. Nicorandil (3 micrograms/kg/min), cromakalim (0.03 micrograms/kg/min) and nitroglycerin (1 micrograms/kg/min) increased coronary blood flow. However, the inhibitory effects of each drug on the U46619-induced vasoconstriction were not influenced by the partial occlusion of the left circumflex coronary artery, which kept coronary blood flow constant. This indicates a direct antispasmogenic effect of K+ channel openers, which is independent of that mediated by the response to flow. Furthermore, our results suggest that, by this effect, nicorandil protects large coronary arteries from U46619-induced vasoconstriction.
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