Hypertension with Mineralocorticoid Administration to the Long-Evans Rat

1979 ◽  
Vol 56 (2) ◽  
pp. 109-113 ◽  
Author(s):  
O. B. Holland ◽  
C. Gomez-Sanchez ◽  
T. Ziegler

1. The Carworth Long-Evans rat has been reported to develop adrenal-regeneration hypertension but not deoxycorticosterone acetate (DOCA) hypertension. Deficiency of a hypothalamic receptor for deoxycorticosterone which mediates saline polydipsia has been postulated to underlie this resistance. Since a mineralocorticoid etiology for adrenal-regeneration hypertension has been postulated and all mineralocorticoids are thought to act on common receptors, these previous reports are difficult to reconcile. 2. To determine if an absolute or relative resistance to mineralocorticoids is present, Charles River Long-Evans and Sprague-Dawley rats were given 40 mg (107 μmol) of DOCA pellets/rat or 250 μg (0·65 μmol) of 2α-methyl-9α-fluorocortisol/day subcutaneously. 3. Saline polydipsia occurred with both steroids with both rat strains, though significantly less with the Long-Evans rats. Both types of rats became hypertensive and developed cardiac and renal enlargement with both steroids. Hypertension developed more rapidly with 2α-methyl-9α-fluorocortisol. 4. Thus mineralocorticoid hypertension can be produced in the Charles River Long-Evans rat, and the development of adrenal-regeneration hypertension in this rat strain is not incompatible with a mineralocorticoid etiology for adrenal-regeneration hypertension.

1997 ◽  
Vol 17 (5) ◽  
pp. 571-576 ◽  
Author(s):  
Heather S. Oliff ◽  
Peter Coyle ◽  
Eckard Weber

Recently we observed inter- and intrastrain differences in cortical infarct volumes after middle cerebral artery (MCA) occlusion. Variations in the anastomoses providing collateral blood supply could account for different lesion sizes. Our objectives were to compare number and internal diameters of the MCA-anterior cerebral artery (MCA-ACA) anastomoses and to determine if the lesion extended beyond branches of the MCA territory into the field of the ACA in the rat strains/lines. Sprague-Dawley rats and Wistar rats from Simonsen Laboratories (SLSD and SLWIS) and Sprague-Dawley rats from Taconic Laboratories (TLSD) and Charles River Laboratories (CRSD) were anesthetized and injected with papaverine and Vultex (white latex) for arterial visualization. Some rats were also subjected to MCA occlusion. Significantly fewer anastomoses were present in SLSD and SLWIS than in CRSD and TLSD (p < 0.05). The mean internal diameters of the anastomoses were not significantly different between the strains/lines (p > 0.05). After MCA occlusion, significantly more (p < 0.05) TLSD and CRSD than SLSD had lesions extending from the MCA field beneath the anastomoses and into the region supplied by the ACA. Neither the number, luminal diameter, nor density of MCA-ACA anastomoses appears to be the limiting factor that differentiates lesion size following MCA occlusion in these particular rat strains/lines. Therefore, factors other than anatomical variations probably account for different lesion sizes.


2006 ◽  
Vol 27 (3) ◽  
pp. 136-146 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rachel M. Ceballos ◽  
Martha M. Faraday ◽  
Laura Cousino Klein

The effects of immobilization (IM) stress on plasma leptin levels and bodyweight in adult Sprague-Dawley (19 males, 20 females) and Long-Evans (20 males, 20 females) rats were investigated. Following a 10-day baseline period, half the animals from each experimental group were exposed to immobilization stress or no-stress 20 min/day for 21 days. Plasma leptin and corticosterone levels were measured following stress or no-stress exposure on the last day of the experiment. Corticosterone levels confirmed stress exposure. Important interactive effects of stress, strain, and sex on leptin and corticosterone levels were also observed. Specifically, females displayed higher leptin levels than did males, regardless of stress exposure. Strain interacted with stress such that stressed Long-Evans rats displayed higher leptin levels than did stressed Sprague-Dawley rats; there were no strain differences in leptin levels among nonstressed rats. Also, correlations between leptin and corticosterone were strain-specific. Results are discussed with respect to previously unreported strain differences in the effects of immobilization stress on circulating plasma leptin and the relevance to inconsistent findings in the human literature.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Karl T. Schmidt ◽  
Jessica L. Sharp ◽  
Sarah B. Ethridge ◽  
Tallia Pearson ◽  
Shannon Ballard ◽  
...  

AbstractHeroin intake decreases during the proestrus phase of the estrous cycle in female, Long-Evans rats. The purpose of this study was to (1) determine if proestrus-induced decreases in heroin intake extend across rat strains and (2) determine if proestrus-induced decreases in responding extend to a nondrug reinforcer. Female rats were implanted with intravenous catheters and trained to self-administer heroin. Estrous cycle was tracked daily for the duration of the study. During testing, Lewis, Sprague-Dawley, and Long Evans rats self-administered low (0.0025 mg/kg) and high (0.0075 mg /kg) doses of heroin (Experiment 1) and then self-administered sucrose (Experiment 2) on fixed ratio (FR1) schedules of reinforcement. Heroin intake decreased significantly during proestrus in all three rat strains under at least one dose condition; however, sucrose intake did not decrease during proestrus in any strain. These data indicate that responding maintained by heroin, but not a nondrug reinforcer, significantly decreases during proestrus in female rats and that these effects are consistent across rat strain.


Author(s):  
D. J. McComb ◽  
J. Beri ◽  
F. Zak ◽  
K. Kovacs

Investigation of the spontaneous pituitary adenomas in rat have been limited mainly to light microscopic study. Furth et al. (1973) described them as chromophobic, secreting prolactin. Kovacs et al. (1977) in an ul trastructural investigation of adenomas of old female Long-Evans rats, found that they were composed of prolactin cells. Berkvens et al. (1980) using immunocytochemistry at the light microscopic level, demonstrated that some spontaneous tumors of old Wistar rats could contain GH, TSH or ACTH as well as PRL.


1980 ◽  
Vol 58 (5) ◽  
pp. 365-371 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Berthelot ◽  
A. Gairard

1. Hypertension induced by treatment with deoxycorticosterone acetate and sodium chloride was studied in male Sprague-Dawley rats and related to parathyroid hormone secretion. 2. Lack of parathyroid hormone (due to parathyroidectomy) or decreased parathormone secretion (due to a high-calcium diet) partially inhibited the development of arterial hypertension. 3. In contrast, in thyroparathyroidectomized rats supplemented with thyroxine, the administration of parathyroid hormone rapidly elevated arterial blood pressure. 4. Maintaining a physiological concentration of serum calcium in the absence of parathyroid hormone (by feeding a high-calcium diet to parathyroidectomized rats) was not sufficient to establish mineralocorticoid hypertension. 5. These results show that parathyroid hormone is necessary for the complete development of mineralocorticoid hypertension.


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