Hypertension, Vol 14, 184-190, Copyright © 1989 by American Heart Association
W Sripairojthikoon, S Oparil and JM Wyss
Previous studies demonstrate that bilateral renal denervation enhances
urinary sodium excretion and delays the onset of hypertension in young
(7-week-old) spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR) maintained on ordinary
laboratory chow. We interpret these data as suggesting that increased renal
nerve activity in this model contributes to hypertension by causing excess
sodium retention. More recent studies show that dietary NaCl
supplementation increases blood pressure and peripheral sympathetic nervous
system activity in NaCl-sensitive SHR (SHR-S). The present study tests the
hypothesis that the renal nerves contribute to the rise in arterial
pressure caused by dietary NaCl supplementation in this model. SHR-S were
fed a high (8%) or basal (1%) NaCl diet beginning at age 7 weeks. Bilateral
renal denervation was carried out 2 weeks after the initiation of the
diets, at which time systolic blood pressure was significantly higher in
the high (compared with the basal) NaCl group. Systolic blood pressure was
reduced slightly less in denervated SHR-S on the high (compared with basal)
NaCl diet during the following 5 weeks. Renal denervation performed 1 week
before initiation of the diets attenuated the subsequent development of
hypertension equally in both groups. Both renal denervation and the high
NaCl diet increased alpha 2-adrenergic receptor numbers in the kidney;
renal denervation caused an approximately equal increase in alpha
2-adrenergic receptor binding in SHR-S on high and basal NaCl diets. The
high NaCl diet increased plasma noradrenaline concentration, and renal
denervation lowered mean arterial pressure but did not decrease circulating
catecholamines in either diet group.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
ARTICLES
Renal nerve contribution to NaCl-exacerbated hypertension in spontaneously hypertensive rats
Department of Cell Biology and Anatomy, University of Alabama, Birmingham 35294.
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