Effect of Adrenomedullin on Placental Arteries in Normal and Preeclamptic Pregnancies

2001 
Adrenomedullin is a potent vasodilatory peptide with plasma levels that increase during pregnancy. Although fetoplacental adrenomedullin levels are reported to increase in preeclampsia, maternal plasma levels may be elevated or decreased, or they may resemble those in normal pregnancy. In other hypertensive conditions, adrenomedullin increases. Therefore, we hypothesized that maternal plasma adrenomedullin levels would be higher in hypertensive pregnancies than in normotensive pregnancies and that the higher placental resistance found in preeclamptic pregnancies results from blunted activity of adrenomedullin on the vasculature. Adrenomedullin concentrations in plasma from women with normotensive pregnancies, gestational hypertension, and preeclampsia were determined by radioimmunoassay. Stem villous arteries from normotensive and preeclamptic pregnancies were dissected and mounted on a wire myograph system. Arteries were first preconstricted to 80% of their maximum constriction with U46619, a thromboxane A 2 mimetic, and exposed to cumulative doses of adrenomedullin (1×10 − 9 to 3×10 − 7 mol/L). Contrary to our hypothesis, there were no significant differences in maternal plasma adrenomedullin levels among patients with normal pregnancies, gestational hypertension, and preeclampsia. Adrenomedullin significantly relaxed arteries from both normal and preeclamptic placentas, but there was no significant difference between the 2 groups. During normal pregnancy, adrenomedullin may contribute to the low placental vascular resistance. This pathway appears to be intact in preeclampsia. We conclude that the increased placental vascular resistance observed in preeclampsia is due neither to reduced adrenomedullin secretion nor to an attenuated vascular responsiveness. Moreover, unlike other hypertensive disorders, there is no compensatory rise in circulating adrenomedullin levels.
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