Hypertension, Vol 7, 722-728, Copyright © 1985 by American Heart Association
JY Pan, VS Bishop, NA Ball and JR Haywood
Renal hypertension has been shown to be prevented and reversed by renal
denervation. It has been postulated that the afferent nerves from the
kidney are responsible for mediating the hypertensive stimulus that
activates the sympathetic nervous system and increases arterial pressure.
This study was designed to directly test the hypothesis that the afferent
renal nerves are necessary for the development and maintenance of renal
hypertension. In the first experiment, dorsal spinal rhizotomies or sham
rhizotomies were performed in rats between T9 and L1, through which
afferent renal nerves have been shown to traverse. After the one-kidney,
one-wrap procedure, the increase in systolic arterial pressure and water
intake was similar in the two groups of rats. To determine whether the
removal of afferent renal nerves reversed the hypertensive process, animals
with established renal hypertension were subjected to dorsal rhizotomy or
the sham- rhizotomy procedure. Again, there was no significant effect on
systolic arterial pressure and water intake. Although combined dorsal and
ventral rhizotomy and subdiaphragmatic vagotomy did not affect the onset of
hypertension, spinal transection at the level of C8 effectively prevented
the rise in arterial pressure. Although efferent neural mechanisms
contribute to the hypertensive process, these studies suggest that afferent
renal nerves are not directly involved in the development and maintenance
of one-kidney, one-wrap renal hypertension.
ARTICLES
Inability of dorsal spinal rhizotomy to prevent renal wrap hypertension in rats
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