Objective: Our purpose was to investigate the role of the endothelium in the human uterine arterial response to norepinephrine in the nonpregnant and pregnant states.
Study design: Tissue was obtained from six pregnant and six nonpregnant women undergoing cesarean section or hysterectomy. Uterine radial arteries were isolated and subjected to norepinephrine dose-response curves with and without intact endothelium.
Results: Responses were obtained over a dose range of 10(-8) to 10(-4) norepinephrine. Initially there was no difference between vessels from pregnant and nonpregnant patients, but removal of the endothelium significantly increased the response in vessels from pregnant women. Addition of nitro-L-arginine methyl ester when the endothelium was intact did not alter the dose-response curves.
Conclusions: In pregnancy human uterine radial arteries are more sensitive to norepinephrine than during the nonpregnant state. This increase is countered by an endothelium-derived relaxing factor. The factor is unlikely to be nitric oxide.