Hypertension, Vol 23, 791-796, Copyright © 1994 by American Heart Association
JM Wyss, S Roysommuti, K King, I Kadisha, CP Regan and KH Berecek
Lifetime treatment with oral captopril prevents the development of
hypertension in spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR). We tested the
hypothesis that this treatment also prevents the hypertensive response that
occurs when untreated NaCl-sensitive SHR are placed on a high NaCl diet.
Female SHR were continuously treated with oral captopril before conception
and throughout lactation, and the offspring were similarly treated with
oral captopril throughout life. At 6 weeks of age, treated male SHR were
placed on an 8% (or remained on a 1%) NaCl diet, and systolic arterial
pressure, heart rate, and body weight were monitored for 2 weeks. The 8%
NaCl diet caused a rapid increase in arterial pressure in the lifetime
captopril-treated rats, and 18 days after the initiation of the diet, the
mean arterial pressure of this group was 136 +/- 7 mm Hg compared with 100
+/- 2 mm Hg in the 1% NaCl diet rats. The results of a second experiment
confirmed the hypertensive effect of the high NaCl diet in lifetime
captopril-treated SHR and demonstrated that after 18 days on the diet the
dietary NaCl-induced hypertensive response was greater in magnitude in
lifetime captopril-treated compared with untreated SHR. The results also
demonstrated that lifetime captopril-treated Wistar-Kyoto rats, which are
normotensive irrespective of captopril treatment, display no significant
increase in arterial pressure when given a high NaCl diet. A third
experiment demonstrated that rapidly progressing NaCl sensitivity is also
present in female lifetime captopril-treated SHR.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250
WORDS)
ARTICLES
Salt-induced hypertension in normotensive spontaneously hypertensive rats
Department of Cell Biology, University of Alabama at Birmingham 35294- 0019.
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