Resistance vessel sensitivity to angiotensin II in vivo was studied in 13 primigravid normotensive women (16-24 weeks gestation), and in 10 non-pregnant control women. Angiotensin II was infused into the brachial artery at doses of 10, 100, 1,000 and 10,000 fmol min-' and forearm blood flow measured by plethysmography. Reduction in forearm blood flow at all concentrations of angiotensin II was significantly greater in non-pregnant than in pregnant women. The dose-response relationships, plotted semi-logarithmically, were similar in shape in each group but sensitivity to angiotensin II was reduced in pregnant subjects compared with non-pregnant women. This is most simply explained by an effect of pregnancy on the sensitivity to angiotensin II of vascular smooth muscle in forearm resistance vessels.
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