From the Baker Medical Research Institute, Prahran, Victoria, Australia.
Correspondence to Dr R.L. Woods, Howard Florey Institute, The University of Melbourne, Parkville, Victoria 3052, Australia. E-mail R.Woods{at}hfi.unimelb.edu.au
AbstractIn previous studies we
demonstrated that in normotensive rats, but not in spontaneously
hypertensive rats (SHR), atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP)
enhances bradycardic reflexes through an action on cardiac vagal
afferent pathways. The present study aimed to determine whether
cardiac hypertrophy, hypertension, or a nonreversible
genetic factor accounted for the insensitivity of SHR to ANP action on
cardiac reflex pathways. SHR were treated with the
angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitor
perindopril (3 mg/kg per day) for 6 weeks from 4 to 9 weeks of age
(SHR-S, n=10) or for 9 weeks from 4 to 12 weeks of age (SHR-L, n=10) or
were untreated (SHR, n=10) to produce differential effects on blood
pressure and left ventricle/body weight ratio (LV/BW). Untreated
normotensive Wistar-Kyoto rats (WKY, n=10) were also studied. At 13
weeks of age, all rats were instrumented with aortic and jugular
catheters, and at 14 weeks we measured heart rate reflexes to rapid
intravenous infusions of methoxamine (100 µg/kg,
cardiac baroreflex) and serotonin (5 to 60 µg/kg, von
Bezold-Jarisch cardiac chemosensitive reflex), with either
© 1998 American Heart Association, Inc.
Scientific Contributions
ANP and Bradycardic Reflexes in Hypertensive Rats
Influence of Cardiac Hypertrophy
-rat ANP
(150 ng/kg per minute IV) or saline vehicle (270 µL/h IV) infusion.
Perindopril treatment for 6-week (SHR-S) and 9-week (SHR-L) durations
maintained blood pressure at normotensive levels in both groups. SHR-S
exhibited a small degree of cardiac hypertrophy (LV/BW was
8% higher than in WKY but 11% less than in untreated SHR), but LV/BW
was normalized in SHR-L (to within 1% of WKY LV/BW). In WKY, ANP
significantly (P<0.05) enhanced bradycardic responses
to both the cardiac baroreflex (by 42±10%) and von Bezold-Jarisch
chemosensitive reflex (by 17±5%) activation but had no effect in SHR.
The cardiac reflex action of ANP was restored in SHR-L (ANP enhanced
reflex bradycardia by 28±12% and 36±8%, baroreflex and von
Bezold-Jarisch reflex, respectively; P<0.05), but
SHR-S, which developed some cardiac hypertrophy, remained
unresponsive to ANP. Our results suggest that the inability of ANP to
sensitize cardiac vagal (nonarterial) afferents in SHR was
not due to an inherited irreversible component, or the hypertension per
se, but was associated with the presence of cardiac
hypertrophy. A functional consequence of
hypertension-induced cardiac hypertrophy may be the
inhibition of the cardioprotective action of ANP through cardiac
vagal reflexes.
Key Words: atrial natriuretic factor baroreflex reflex hypertrophy, cardiac perindopril rats, inbred SHR
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