Hypertension, Vol 10, 152-156, Copyright © 1987 by American Heart Association
DR Bell, SF Hollingsworth and HW Overbeck
We examined the relationship of intraocular pressure and the development of
one-kidney, one wrapped (perinephritic) hypertension in the dog. Conscious
femoral arterial pressure (direct arterial puncture) and intraocular
pressure (Schiotz tonometer) were measured weekly before and after the
surgical induction of hypertension in 11 healthy male mongrel dogs and
before and after unilateral nephrectomy in 15 normotensive control dogs.
Preoperative mean arterial pressure (102 +/- 5 vs 99 +/- 8 [SD] mm Hg,
hypertensive vs control dogs) and intraocular pressure (18.1 +/- 2.5 vs
17.7 +/- 2.1 mm Hg, hypertensive vs control dogs) were similar in both
groups. In normotensive control dogs, mean arterial pressure and
intraocular pressure averaged over the postoperative period (4-8 weeks) did
not differ significantly from preoperative values. In contrast, during the
same period arterial pressure significantly increased and intraocular
pressure significantly decreased in hypertensive dogs (arterial pressure,
163 +/- 8 mm Hg; intraocular pressure, 11.9 +/- 4.0 mm Hg; p less than
0.001 for both values compared with corresponding values in control dogs).
Intraocular pressure was inversely related to arterial pressure in
hypertensive dogs (r = 0.56, p less than 0.01). These observations indicate
that intraocular pressure decreases with the development of canine one-
kidney, one wrapped hypertension. The mechanism of this decrease may be
related to abnormalities in Na+,K+-adenosine triphosphatase activity found
in this form of hypertension.
ARTICLES
Decreased intraocular pressure in dogs with one-kidney, one wrapped hypertension
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