Hypertension, Vol 4, 597-603, Copyright © 1982 by American Heart Association
JF Liard and R Silenzio
To determine the importance of cardiovascular reflexes in the vasodilation
found in skeletal muscle in the early stages of salt- loading hypertension
in dogs, we gave for several days an intravenous infusion of isotonic
sodium chloride, 190 ml/kg/day, to seven dogs with their renal mass reduced
following extensive destruction of their arterial baroreceptor afferents.
Mean arterial pressure, cardiac output (electromagnetic flowmeter), and
regional blood flows (radioactive microspheres) were measured sequentially
and the results compared with those obtained in five control dogs. The
salt-loaded animals exhibited an increase in cardiac output and in arterial
pressure on the first day of infusion. Blood flow to the splanchnic area,
the skin, the bone, the skeletal muscle, the heart, the lungs and the brain
increased significantly, but vascular conductance was unchanged in most
territories, including skeletal muscle. After 5 to 7 days, cardiac output
returned toward control values, but pressure remained elevated. Apart from
the myocardium, the regional blood flows were normalized and the
conductances were decreased. These results indicate that cardiovascular
reflexes are responsible for the transient early vasodilation in skeletal
muscle which characterizes salt-loading hypertension in intact animals.
ARTICLES
Baroreceptor reflex influence on peripheral circulations in salt- loading hypertension in dogs
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