학술논문

Lack of Influence of Circulating Adrenaline on Blood Pressure in Normotensive and Hypertensive Rats
Document Type
Article
Source
Blood Pressure; 1994, Vol. 3 Issue: 1-2 p112-119, 8p
Subject
Language
ISSN
08037051; 16511999
Abstract
The relationship between circulating adrenaline and blood pressure was examined by manipulating plasma adrenaline levels in both normotensive and hypertensive rats: bilateral adrenalmedullectomy was performed in spontaneously hypertensive rats and stroke-prone spontaneously hypertensive rats; adrenaline bitartrate was infused chronically (25-32 μg/kg/h s.c.) into Wistar Kyoto, Sprague Dawley and stroke-prone rats via osmotic minipumps. Arterial and venous catheters were subsequently implanted for direct measurement of mean arterial pressure, blood sampling and drug administration in conscious rats. Adrenaline infusion for 5-6 weeks in Wistar Kyoto rats did not affect resting blood pressure (118 ± 3 versus 119 ± 1 mmHg in controls) even though plasma adrenaline was elevated 12-fold. Plasma noradrenaline was marginally elevated. Blood pressure was also unaffected by adrenaline infusion in Sprague Dawley or stroke-prone hypertensive rats. One week after adrenal medullectomy, plasma adrenaline was reduced 89% in spontaneously hypertensive rats, but blood pressure was unaffected. Ten weeks after adrenal medullectomy in young stroke-prone rats, resting blood pressure was slightly higher (167 ± 2 mmHg) than in control rats (157 ± 2 mmHg), although adrenaline was reduced by 34% in plasma and 67% in adrenal glands. Nitroprusside was infused acutely to lower blood pressure and reflexly elevate plasma noradrenaline. Neither of these responses were affected by chronic adrenaline infusion or adrenal medullectomy. In both adrenaline-infused Wistar Kyoto and medullectomised stroke-prone rats, autonomic blockade reduced blood pressure to a similar extent as in controls, indicating that the degree of sympathetic vasoconstriction was not altered by either treatment. Moreover, pressor responses to i.v. phenylephrine were similar in all groups, indicating that changes in plasma adrenaline did not affect post-synaptic receptor sensitivity. We conclude that elevated plasma adrenaline seen in spontaneous hypertensive rats is unlikely to contribute to their hypertension.