PLoS ONE (Jan 2014)

Anti-hypotensive treatment and endothelin blockade synergistically antagonize exercise fatigue in rats under simulated high altitude.

  • Daniel Radiloff,
  • Yulin Zhao,
  • Alina Boico,
  • Gert Blueschke,
  • Gregory Palmer,
  • Andrew Fontanella,
  • Mark Dewhirst,
  • Claude A Piantadosi,
  • Robert Noveck,
  • David Irwin,
  • Karyn Hamilton,
  • Bruce Klitzman,
  • Thies Schroeder

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0099309
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 6
p. e99309

Abstract

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Rapid ascent to high altitude causes illness and fatigue, and there is a demand for effective acute treatments to alleviate such effects. We hypothesized that increased oxygen delivery to the tissue using a combination of a hypertensive agent and an endothelin receptor A antagonist drugs would limit exercise-induced fatigue at simulated high altitude. Our data showed that the combination of 0.1 mg/kg ambrisentan with either 20 mg/kg ephedrine or 10 mg/kg methylphenidate significantly improved exercise duration in rats at simulated altitude of 4,267 m, whereas the individual compounds did not. In normoxic, anesthetized rats, ephedrine alone and in combination with ambrisentan increased heart rate, peripheral blood flow, carotid and pulmonary arterial pressures, breathing rate, and vastus lateralis muscle oxygenation, but under inspired hypoxia, only the combination treatment significantly enhanced muscle oxygenation. Our results suggest that sympathomimetic agents combined with endothelin-A receptor blockers offset altitude-induced fatigue in rats by synergistically increasing the delivery rate of oxygen to hypoxic muscle by concomitantly augmenting perfusion pressure and improving capillary conductance in the skeletal muscle. Our findings might therefore serve as a basis to develop an effective treatment to prevent high-altitude illness and fatigue in humans.