Estradiol is not protective against angiotensin II‐induced hypertension in middle‐aged ovariectomized rats
A. P. O. Leite, I. Pires dos Santos, Y. Zha, S. A. Blessinger, H. Petillo, N. Jasti, H. C. Cheeran, R. Menon, A. B. Walker, J. M. Daniel, S. H. Lindsey

TL;DR
Estradiol does not protect against high blood pressure and kidney damage in middle-aged rats with preexisting hypertension, suggesting hormone therapy may not help all menopausal women.
Contribution
This study shows estradiol fails to protect against angiotensin II-induced hypertension in ovariectomized rats with preexisting hypertension.
Findings
Estradiol exacerbated kidney damage and failed to reduce oxidative stress in hypertensive rats.
Estradiol attenuated cardiac hypertrophy but worsened proteinuria and reduced glomerular filtration rate.
Preexisting hypertension blunted the protective effects of estradiol on the vasculature and kidneys.
Abstract
Menopause leads to loss of cardiovascular and renal protection, and while hormone therapy offers benefits, its efficacy may depend on health status at menopause onset. We hypothesized that preexisting hypertension blunts the renal, cardiac, and vascular effects of Estradiol (E2). Female Long‐Evans rats were ovariectomized (OVX) at 46 weeks to model menopause and received either E2 or vehicle, and some were infused with angiotensin II (ANG; 700 ng/kg/min) 4 weeks before OVX. Blood pressure (BP) was measured by tail cuff, renal function by urine collection, collagen deposition by histology, and mRNA expression in aorta and kidney by droplet digital PCR. ANG increased BP and proteinuria (p = 0.02), water intake (p < 0.001), urinary output, heart weight, and aortic NOX4 (p < 0.01), confirming hypertension and oxidative stress. E2 reduced body weight (p = 0.02), increased bone mineral…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMenopause: Health Impacts and Treatments · Renin-Angiotensin System Studies · Sodium Intake and Health
