Hypertension, Vol 6, 530-535, Copyright © 1984 by American Heart Association
JH Lombard, ME Hess and WJ Stekiel
This study sought to determine if neural influences and/or alterations in
arteriolar responses to oxygen could contribute to an elevated
microvascular resistance in spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR).
Diameters of third-order arterioles (3A) and fourth-order arterioles (4A)
were measured in the cremaster muscle of 12- to 15-week-old SHR and
normotensive Wistar-Kyoto (WKY) controls anesthetized with pentobarbital.
The preparation was suffused with physiological salt solution (PSS)
equilibrated with various concentrations of oxygen (0% O2, 5% O2, or 10%
O2) with and without local neural blockade with 10(- 7) g/ml tetrodotoxin
(TTX). Total active tone was assessed with 10(-4) M adenosine. SHR 3A (but
not 4A) exhibited a smaller resting diameter than WKY, and larger dilations
in response to TTX and adenosine. When suffusion solution PO2 was elevated
in the presence or absence of TTX, SHR arterioles constricted more than did
those of WKY, and SHR 4A exhibited a higher incidence of complete closure.
Therefore, both neural influences and local vascular control mechanisms may
contribute to an elevated microvascular resistance in SHR.
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Neural and local control of arterioles in SHR
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