scholarly journals Combined effect of neonatal sympathectomy and adrenal demedullation on blood pressure and vascular changes in spontaneously hypertensive rats.

1991 ◽  
Vol 69 (3) ◽  
pp. 714-721 ◽  
Author(s):  
R M Lee ◽  
K R Borkowski ◽  
F H Leenen ◽  
J Tsoporis ◽  
M Coughlin
1979 ◽  
Vol 57 (s5) ◽  
pp. 201s-204s ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Schömig ◽  
R. Dietz ◽  
W. Rascher ◽  
H. Ebser ◽  
U. Voss ◽  
...  

1. Neonatal sympathectomy with 6 hydroxydopamine (6-OHDA) was used as a tool to assess the significance of an increased sympathetic vascular tone for the development of high blood pressure in stroke-prone spontaneously hypertensive rats. After administration of 6-OHDA the rise in blood pressure was blunted for the following 9 weeks until innervation was re-established. 6-OHDA-treated rats retained more sodium and had larger plasma and blood volumes than sham-treated rats. 2. Catecholamines in plasma were increased 2–10-fold immediately after sympathectomy, but their concentrations were subnormal on day 7. Eight weeks after sympathectomy plasma noradrenaline and dopamine were not elevated, but plasma adrenaline has increased twofold. 3. The reactivity of resistance vessels to noradrenaline was markedly enhanced and the neuronal uptake and metabolism of noradrenaline were still reduced 8 weeks after neonatal sympathectomy. 4. These results confirm the significance of an intact sympathetic nervous system for the development in these rats. Sodium retention and increased plasma and blood volume may be considered as a compensatory mechanism for the vasodilatation resulting from decreased vasomotor tone.


1992 ◽  
Vol 70 (9) ◽  
pp. 1261-1270 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert M. K. W. Lee ◽  
Jim Tsoporis ◽  
Roger R. J. Wang

Chronic treatment of spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR) and Kyoto–Wistar normotensive rats (WKY) with nadolol was carried out from gestation until 28 weeks of age. Nadolol treatment caused some lowering of blood pressure but did not prevent the development of hypertension or cardiac hypertrophy in the SHR, in spite of significant β-blockade. The lumen of large mesenteric arteries from control SHR was smaller than from WKY, and nadolol treatment increased the lumen size in the SHR. An increased number of smooth muscle cell layers present in the control SHR as compared with WKY was reduced slightly by nadolol treatment. However, the changes produced by nadolol did not reach the levels of control and treated WKY. In the aorta, the incidence of polyploid smooth muscle cells was higher in the SHR than the WKY in the control group. Nadolol treatment reduced the percentage of polyploid cells in both SHR and WKY, so that the difference between these two groups of animals was eliminated in the treated groups. The tissue level of norepinephrine in the plasma, heart, mesenteric arteries, and adrenal glands in the SHR and WKY was not affected by the treatment. We suggest that the ineffectiveness of nadolol in preventing hypertension development may be due to its lack of effect in preventing primary changes in the resistance arteries, and that the development of polyploidy of smooth muscle cells may be mediated by β-receptors.Key words: nadolol, vascular changes, hypertension, spontaneously hypertensive rats, β-receptor, catecholamines.


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