Hypertension, Vol 12, 52-58, Copyright © 1988 by American Heart Association
JP Porter
The sympathetic nervous system is an important factor that can induce
increased renin secretion by the kidney. In recent years, the notion has
arisen that the sympathetic nervous system may also function to set the
level of responsiveness of the kidney to nonneural stimuli for renin
secretion. However, evidence in favor of this possibility has come
primarily from studies employing direct electrical stimulation of renal
nerves, and no attempt has been made to determine if central neural sites
can also influence the responsiveness of the kidney. In the present study,
the ability of hypothalamic activation to enhance the renin response to
suprarenal aortic occlusion was investigated. Conscious, freely moving rats
with an inflatable cuff placed around the aorta were used to determine the
relationship between renal-perfusion pressure and plasma renin activity in
the control state and during continuous low-level stimulation of the
paraventricular nucleus. The stimulation resulted in a rightward shift in
the curve that related renal perfusion pressure to plasma renin activity;
that is, for any given decrease in renal perfusion pressure, the plasma
renin activity was greater during the ongoing stimulation. This rightward
shift appeared to be mediated by increased renal nerve activity, since
renal denervation prevented the shift. These data indicate that the
hypothalamus, which plays an important role in regulating sympathetic
activity, is capable of increasing the sensitivity of the kidney to a
nonneural stimulus for renin secretion. This effect may become important in
certain hypertensive and prehypertensive states where central neural
activity is thought to be enhanced.
ARTICLES
The renin response to aortic occlusion is enhanced by stimulation of the hypothalamus
Department of Physiology and Biophysics, University of Louisville, KY 40292.
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