Hypertension, Vol 2, 192-197, Copyright © 1980 by American Heart Association
G Simon
The effect of reversal of hypertension on vascular function and composition
was investigated in renal-hypertensive rats. The study comprised three
groups of rats: 1) 21 male Sprague-Dawley rats with one- kidney, one clip
Goldblatt hypertension of 9 weeks' duration; 2) 20 rats with one-kidney,
one clip hypertension that underwent removal of renal artery clip (were
"unclipped") at 6 weeks of hypertension, 3 weeks prior to the study; and 3)
sham-operated normotensive control rats. Venous pressure-volume and
arterial pressure-flow relationships were measured at maximal vasodilation
(sodium nitroprusside and papaverine) in the denervated, pump-perfused
vascular beds of the hindquarters of rats. Anatomically defined segments of
the aorta and of the vena cava were removed from rats for water, sodium,
and potassium analysis. Hypertension was completely reversed in the
"unclipped" rats. Compared to values obtained in normotensive control rats,
the water concentration of the aorta and of the vena cava, the potassium
concentration of the aorta, and the sodium concentration of the vena cava
were increased (p less than 0.05) in rats with one-kidney, one clip
hypertension. These changes were reversed in the "unclipped" rats. In
contrast, the shift of the venous pressure-volume and of the arterial
pressure-flow curves toward the pressure axis at maximal vasodilation in
hypertensive rats (p less than 0.02) persisted following reversal of
hypertension in the "unclipped" rats (p less than 0.05). In chronic,
one-kidney renovascular hypertension, the contribution of vascular wall
"water-logging" to increased structural arterial resistance and decreased
structural venous capacity appears to be minor.
ARTICLES
Reversibility of arterial and venous changes in renal hypertensive rats
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