Abstract
The acute administration of cunjugated equine estrogen (CEE) to dogs significantly attenuated the severity and incidence of ventricular arrhythmias during ischemia and reperfusion. We hypothesized that one of the cardioprotective mechanisms of estrogen might be the ability to maintain electrical stability of the heart during ischemia. The current study was conducted to determine the effect of chronic administration of estrogen, simulating hormone replacement therapy, on the ventricular arrhythmias of ischemia and reperfusion, Chronically-treated (100 μg/kg/week CEE, or vehicle) male beagles were anesthetized and subjected to regional ischemia (20 min) and reperfusion. Although there was a trend towards a lower incidence of arrhythmias during ischemia in estrogen-treated dogs, values did not achieve significance at P<0.05. Baseline coronary vascular resistance was significantly higher in estrogen-treated dogs (2.3 vs 1.5 mmHg/ml/min/100 g, P<0.05) indicating an increase in vasomotor tone. There was also an increase in the time it took hyperemic coronary blood flow to reach a peak value upon reperfusion (71 sec in estrogen-treated dogs vs 12 sec in vehicle-treated dogs, P<0.05). This slower reflow is consistent with increased coronary vascular resistance upon reflow in estrogen-treated dogs. We conclude that the chronic administration of CEE to male dogs increased coronary vascular tone, and impaired the rate of reperfusion, but did not decrease the incidence of ventricular arrhythmias caused by ischemia.
Similar content being viewed by others
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Additional information
Received: 31 July 1997, Returned for revision: 18 September 1997, Revision received: 19 October 1997, Accepted: 4 November 1997
Rights and permissions
About this article
Cite this article
McHugh, N., Solowiej, A., Sternberg, L. et al. Cardiac and coronary vascular effects of chronically administered estrogen in the dog. Basic Res Cardiol 93, 116–121 (1998). https://doi.org/10.1007/s003950050071
Issue Date:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s003950050071