Hypertension, Vol 7, 392-397, Copyright © 1985 by American Heart Association
S Sadoshima, M Fujishima, F Yoshida, S Ibayashi, O Shiokawa and T Omae
Autoregulation of cerebral blood flow was studied with the hydrogen
clearance method during development of hypertension in young spontaneously
hypertensive rats. To examine the influence of sympathetic nerves on
autoregulatory range, the unilateral superior cervical ganglion was removed
2 hours or 2 or 5 weeks before the study. Wall-to-lumen ratio of cerebral
arteries was determined with freeze substitution technique. Basal blood
pressures were 87 +/- 1 mm Hg (mean +/- SEM) at 4 weeks of age, 105 +/- 2
at 6 weeks, and 126 +/- 3 at 9 weeks, although resting cerebral blood flow
was unchanged. Initially, cerebral blood flow remained relatively constant
when the blood pressure was raised by intravenous infusion of
phenylephrine. The upper limits of cerebral blood flow autoregulation in
these groups were 110 +/- 4 mm Hg, 126 +/- 7, and 159 +/- 6 respectively.
Acute ganglionectomy significantly lowered the upper limits (p less than
0.05), but chronic denervation did not affect the autoregulatory range. The
wall-to-lumen ratios of cerebral arteries were 0.136 +/- 0.007 at 4 weeks
and 0.130 +/- 0.005 at 9 weeks. These differences were not significant, nor
did sympathetic denervation alter the ratio. These results indicate that
(1) the upward shift of the autoregulation is closely related to a rise in
the basal blood pressure, (2) acute interruption of sympathetic nerves
modulates the autoregulatory range, and (3) adaptation of cerebral blood
flow autoregulation to early developmental hypertension may be attributed
to factors other than vascular smooth muscle hypertrophy.
ARTICLES
Cerebral autoregulation in young spontaneously hypertensive rats. Effect of sympathetic denervation
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