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Dive into the research topics where Igor L. Gomes-Santos is active.

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Featured researches published by Igor L. Gomes-Santos.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Effects of Exercise Training on Circulating and Skeletal Muscle Renin-Angiotensin System in Chronic Heart Failure Rats

Igor L. Gomes-Santos; Tiago Fernandes; Gisele K. Couto; Julio Ferreira-Filho; Vera Maria Cury Salemi; Fernanda Barrinha Fernandes; Dulce Elena Casarini; Patricia C. Brum; Luciana V. Rossoni; Edilamar Menezes de Oliveira; Carlos Eduardo Negrão

Background Accumulated evidence shows that the ACE-AngII-AT1 axis of the renin-angiotensin system (RAS) is markedly activated in chronic heart failure (CHF). Recent studies provide information that Angiotensin (Ang)-(1–7), a metabolite of AngII, counteracts the effects of AngII. However, this balance between AngII and Ang-(1–7) is still little understood in CHF. We investigated the effects of exercise training on circulating and skeletal muscle RAS in the ischemic model of CHF. Methods/Main Results Male Wistar rats underwent left coronary artery ligation or a Sham operation. They were divided into four groups: 1) Sedentary Sham (Sham-S), 2) exercise-trained Sham (Sham-Ex), sedentary CHF (CHF-S), and exercise-trained CHF (CHF-Ex). Angiotensin concentrations and ACE and ACE2 activity in the circulation and skeletal muscle (soleus and plantaris) were quantified. Skeletal muscle ACE and ACE2 protein expression, and AT1, AT2, and Mas receptor gene expression were also evaluated. CHF reduced ACE2 serum activity. Exercise training restored ACE2 and reduced ACE activity in CHF. Exercise training reduced plasma AngII concentration in both Sham and CHF rats and increased the Ang-(1–7)/AngII ratio in CHF rats. CHF and exercise training did not change skeletal muscle ACE and ACE2 activity and protein expression. CHF increased AngII levels in both soleus and plantaris muscle, and exercise training normalized them. Exercise training increased Ang-(1–7) in the plantaris muscle of CHF rats. The AT1 receptor was only increased in the soleus muscle of CHF rats, and exercise training normalized it. Exercise training increased the expression of the Mas receptor in the soleus muscle of both exercise-trained groups, and normalized it in plantaris muscle. Conclusions Exercise training causes a shift in RAS towards the Ang-(1–7)-Mas axis in skeletal muscle, which can be influenced by skeletal muscle metabolic characteristics. The changes in RAS circulation do not necessarily reflect the changes occurring in the RAS of skeletal muscle.


American Journal of Physiology-heart and Circulatory Physiology | 2015

Effects of exercise training on neurovascular control and skeletal myopathy in systolic heart failure.

Carlos Eduardo Negrão; Holly R. Middlekauff; Igor L. Gomes-Santos; Ligia M. Antunes-Correa

Neurohormonal excitation and dyspnea are the hallmarks of heart failure (HF) and have long been associated with poor prognosis in HF patients. Sympathetic nerve activity (SNA) and ventilatory equivalent of carbon dioxide (VE/VO2) are elevated in moderate HF patients and increased even further in severe HF patients. The increase in SNA in HF patients is present regardless of age, sex, and etiology of systolic dysfunction. Neurohormonal activation is the major mediator of the peripheral vasoconstriction characteristic of HF patients. In addition, reduction in peripheral blood flow increases muscle inflammation, oxidative stress, and protein degradation, which is the essence of the skeletal myopathy and exercise intolerance in HF. Here we discuss the beneficial effects of exercise training on resting SNA in patients with systolic HF and its central and peripheral mechanisms of control. Furthermore, we discuss the exercise-mediated improvement in peripheral vasoconstriction in patients with HF. We will also focus on the effects of exercise training on ventilatory responses. Finally, we review the effects of exercise training on features of the skeletal myopathy in HF. In summary, exercise training plays an important role in HF, working synergistically with pharmacological therapies to ameliorate these abnormalities in clinical practice.


Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise | 2016

Neurovascular Control and Cardiac Structure in Amateur Runners with Hypertension.

De Sá Perlingeiro P; Luciene Ferreira Azevedo; Igor L. Gomes-Santos; Bortolotto La; Rondon Mu; Carlos Eduardo Negrão; De Matos Ld

PURPOSE The neurovascular mechanisms underlying hypertension are minimized by exercise training. However, it is not known whether previously trained individuals with hypertension would have deleterious repercussion of this disease. Our aim was to investigate the neurovascular control and the cardiac structure of athletes with hypertension. METHODS Muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA) (microneurography), baroreflex sensitivity (intravenous infusion of phenylephrine and nitroprusside), arterial stiffness (pulse wave velocity and echotracking), and cardiac structure (echocardiography) were evaluated in 17 runners with hypertension (42 ± 1 yr) and 20 normotensive (43 ± 1 yr) amateur runners. RESULTS Runners with hypertension had higher MSNA (+24% burst frequency, P = 0.02; +24%, burst incidence, P < 0.01), left ventricular mass (+22%, P < 0.01), septum wall thickness (+9%, P = 0.04), posterior wall thickness (+11%, P = 0.04), and left atrium (+11%, P < 0.001) compared with normotensive runners. Baroreflex control of heart rate was lower in runners with hypertension during increase (P = 0.05) but not during decrease (P = 0.11) of systolic blood pressure when compared with normotensive runners. There was no difference between groups in baroreflex control of MSNA during increase (P = 0.38) and decrease (P = 0.36) of diastolic blood pressure. Pulse wave velocity (P = 0.71) and carotid variables: intima media thickness (P = 0.18), diameter (P = 0.09), and distension (P = 0.79) were similar between groups. CONCLUSIONS Sympathetic overactivity seems to be involved in the underlying mechanisms of hypertension in amateur runners. Alterations in cardiac structure and decreased baroreflex control of heart rate suggest limited protection from exercise training. However, baroreflex control of MSNA and elastic properties of artery are preserved in this population.


American Journal of Physiology-heart and Circulatory Physiology | 2018

Exercise training induces eNOS coupling and restores relaxation in coronary arteries of heart failure rats

Gisele K. Couto; Suliana Mesquita Paula; Igor L. Gomes-Santos; Carlos Eduardo Negrão; Luciana V. Rossoni

Exercise training (ET) has emerged as a nonpharmacological therapy for cardiovascular diseases because of its helpful milieu for improving vascular function. The aim of the present study was to assess whether ET reverses the alterations in vascular reactivity observed in heart failure (HF)-related coronary arteries and to elucidate the molecular mechanisms involved in these adjustments. Male Wistar rats were subjected to either coronary artery ligation or sham operation. Four weeks after the surgery, rats were divided into two groups: untrained HF (UHF) and exercise-trained HF (THF). ET was conducted on a treadmill for 8 wk. An untrained SO group was included in the study as a normal control. ET restored the impaired acetylcholine (ACh)- and sodium nitroprusside-induced relaxation in coronary arteries to levels of the control. Oxidative stress and reduced nitric oxide (NO) production were observed in UHF, whereas ET restored both parameters to the levels of the control. Expression levels of endothelial NO synthase (eNOS) and soluble guanylyl cyclase subunits were increased in coronary arteries of UHF rats but reduced in THF rats. Tetrahydrobiopterin restored ACh-induced NO production in the UHF group, indicating that eNOS was uncoupled. ET increased the eNOS dimer-to-monomer ratio and expression of GTP cyclohydrolase 1, thus increasing NO bioavailability. Taken together, these findings demonstrate that ET reverses the dysfunction of the NO/soluble guanylyl cyclase pathway present in coronary arteries of HF rats. These effects of ET are associated with increased GTP cyclohydrolase 1 expression, restoration of NO bioavailability, and reduced oxidative stress through eNOS coupling. NEW & NOTEWORTHY The present study provides a molecular basis for the exercise-induced improvement in coronary arteries function in heart failure. Increasing the expression of GTP cyclohydrolase 1, the rate-limiting enzyme in the de novo biosynthesis of tetrahydrobiopterin, exercise training couples endothelial nitric oxide synthase, reduces oxidative stress, and increases nitric oxide bioavailability and sensitivity in coronary arteries of heart failure rats.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Predominance of Intrinsic Mechanism of Resting Heart Rate Control and Preserved Baroreflex Sensitivity in Professional Cyclists after Competitive Training

Luciene Ferreira Azevedo; Patrícia de Sá Perlingeiro; Denise Hachul; Igor L. Gomes-Santos; Jeane Mike Tsutsui; Carlos Eduardo Negrão; Luciana de Matos

Different season trainings may influence autonomic and non-autonomic cardiac control of heart rate and provokes specific adaptations on heart’s structure in athletes. We investigated the influence of transition training (TT) and competitive training (CT) on resting heart rate, its mechanisms of control, spontaneous baroreflex sensitivity (BRS) and relationships between heart rate mechanisms and cardiac structure in professional cyclists (N = 10). Heart rate (ECG) and arterial blood pressure (Pulse Tonometry) were recorded continuously. Autonomic blockade was performed (atropine—0.04 mg.kg-1; esmolol—500 μg.kg-1 = 0.5 mg). Vagal effect, intrinsic heart rate, parasympathetic (n) and sympathetic (m) modulations, autonomic influence, autonomic balance and BRS were calculated. Plasma norepinephrine (high-pressure liquid chromatography) and cardiac structure (echocardiography) were evaluated. Resting heart rate was similar in TT and CT. However, vagal effect, intrinsic heart rate, autonomic influence and parasympathetic modulation (higher n value) decreased in CT (P≤0.05). Sympathetic modulation was similar in both trainings. The autonomic balance increased in CT but still showed parasympathetic predominance. Cardiac diameter, septum and posterior wall thickness and left ventricular mass also increased in CT (P<0.05) as well as diastolic function. We observed an inverse correlation between left ventricular diastolic diameter, septum and posterior wall thickness and left ventricular mass with intrinsic heart rate. Blood pressure and BRS were similar in both trainings. Intrinsic heart rate mechanism is predominant over vagal effect during CT, despite similar resting heart rate. Preserved blood pressure levels and BRS during CT are probably due to similar sympathetic modulation in both trainings.


International Journal of Sports Medicine | 2014

Sport Modality Affects Bradycardia Level and Its Mechanisms of Control in Professional Athletes.

Luciene Ferreira Azevedo; Patrícia de Sá Perlingeiro; Denise Hachul; Igor L. Gomes-Santos; Patricia C. Brum; T. G. Allison; Carlos Eduardo Negrão; L. de Matos


The FASEB Journal | 2014

Circulating Ang II modulates the effects of exercise training on skeletal myopathy in heart failure (874.8)

Igor L. Gomes-Santos; Tiago Fernandes; Gisele K. Couto; Julio Ferreira-Filho; Vera Maria Cury Salemi; Fernanda Pelegrino Fernandes; Dulce Elena Casarini; Patricia C. Brum; Luciana V. Rossoni; Edilamar Menezes de Oliveira; Carlos Eduardo Negrão


The FASEB Journal | 2015

Exercise Training Reduces AngII and Increases Ang-(1-7) Concentration in Cardiac Muscle of CHF Rats

Igor L. Gomes-Santos; Tiago Fernandes; Gisele K. Couto; Julio Ferreira-Filho; Vera Maria Cury Salemi; Fernanda Dreux Miranda Fernandes; Dulce E. Casarini; Patricia C. Brum; Luciana V. Rossoni; Edilamar Menezes de Oliveira; Carlos Eduardo Negrão


Archive | 2015

failurein sympathetic hyperactivity-induced heart handling-related protein 2+ function and Ca Aerobic exercise training improves skeletal muscle

Carlos R. Bueno; Julio C. B. Ferreira; M. G. Pereira; Aline Villa Nova Bacurau; Patricia C. Brum; Jeffrey R. Jasper; Darren T. Hwee; Adam R. Kennedy; James J. Hartman; Julie Ryans; Nickie Durham; Carlos Eduardo Negrão; Holly R. Middlekauff; Igor L. Gomes-Santos; Ligia M. Antunes-Correa


Archive | 2015

rabbits with heart failure: role of nitric oxide Enhanced activity of carotid body chemoreceptors in

Wei-Zhong Wang; Irving H. Zucker; H. D. Schultz; Noah J. Marcus; Rodrigo Del Rio; Harold D. Schultz; Barbara J. Morgan; Russell Adrian; Melissa L. Bates; John M. Dopp; Jerome A. Dempsey; Carlos Eduardo Negrão; Holly R. Middlekauff; Igor L. Gomes-Santos; Ligia M. Antunes-Correa

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