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1.
Summary Pekin ducks were adapted to permanent osmotic stress by rearing them on a NaCl solution of increasing concentration up to 2% as drinking water. Their salt and water balance was compared with that of non-adapted ducks maintained on tap water. Amounts and osmolalities of salt gland secretion and cloacal discharges, plasma osmolality and electrolytes were measured during stepwise osmotic loading by intravenous infusion of NaCl solution of about 740 mosm·kg–1, at rates of 0.25, 0.45 and 0.65 ml·min–1. Before loading, the plasma osmolality of the adapted ducks was about 22 mosm·kg–1 higher than in non-adapted animals. The initial step of loading induced salt gland secretion in the adapted ducks after an average rise of plasma osmolality of 3.6 mosm·kg–1 and in the non-adapted animals after a rise of 7.8 mosm·kg–1. The method of osmotic loading enabled both groups of animals to balance their water input and output. However, only the adapted ducks were able to balance NaCl input and output, predominantly by salt gland secretion, thus maintaining a stable plasma osmolality. The nonadapted ducks retained 42% of the salt load which resulted in a rise of plasma osmolality of 49 mosm·kg–1, more salt being excreted by the kidneys than by the salt glands.In the salt-adapted ducks, salt gland activity, plasma osmolality and Na+ concentration did not correlate during balanced states of salt input and output. The involvement of tonicity receptors in salt gland control was confirmed by the stimulating effects of various hypertonic solutions. On the other hand, continuous loading by a constant infusion of NaCl solution of 1,300 mosm·kg–1 induced a steady salt gland secretion at a rising plasma osmolality and thus suggested that a volume factor is involved in salt gland control. Inhibition of salt gland activity by withdrawing blood and activation by blood infusion confirmed this assumption. While a direct cause and effect relationship between volume changes and salt gland secretion cannot be demonstrated, the results indicate that volume changes in one or more extracellular compartments do affect salt gland secretion.Supported by Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (Si 320/2)  相似文献   

2.
Properties of systemically applied angiotensin II in stimulating water intake of normally hydrated ducks were studied and the results compared with properties of angiotensin II-responsive neurons of the subfornical organ which are considered as targets for circulating angiotensin, II acting as a dipsogen. Following intravenous infusion of hypertonic saline (2000 mosmol·kg-1 at 0.3 ml·min-1 for 1 h), intravenous infusion of 0.3 ml·min-1 isotonic saline with angiotensin II (200 ng·min-1), starting 1 h later, stimulated drinking in each case at an angiotensin II plasma level of about 1400 pg·ml-1. Without hypertonic priming, the same angiotensin II infusion did not stimulate drinking in each experiment; however, if effective, repeated infusions of ANGII induced stable dipsogenic responses. Angiotensin II infusions did not alter plasma levels of antidiuretic hormone. Sar1-Ile8-angiotensin II, a non-selective angiotensin II antagonist, acted weakly as a partial agonist when injused at a dose 200-fold higher than angiotensin II and effectively blocked the dipsogenic action of angiotensin II; this corresponds to the inhibition of angiotensin II-induced excitation by Sar1-Ile8-angiotensin II observed in duck subfornical organ neurons. DuP 753 (losartan), an angiotensin II antagonist specifically blocking AT1 receptors in mammals, had equivocal effects on angiotensin II-induced drinking in ducks at rates 50- and 200-fold higher than angiotensin II, which corresponds to the weak inhibitory action of this compound on angiotensin II-induced neuronal excitation in the duck SFO. Blood pressure was only marginally elevated by the applied angiotensin II dose and Sar1-Ile8-angiotensin II had no effect.Abbreviations ANGII angiotensin II - AVT arginine vasotocin - DuP 753 losartan - EDTA ethylene diamine tetra-acetic acid - HR heart rate - ICV intracerebroventricular - IV intravenous - MAP mean arterial pressure - SARILE Sar1-Ile8-angiotensin II - SFO subfornical organ  相似文献   

3.
Summary The osmoregulatory effects of intravenously (i.v.) administered angiotensin II (AII) at dose rates of 5, 15 and 45 ng · kg–1 · min–1 were examined in kelp gulls utilizing salt glands and/or kidneys as excretory organs.In birds given i.v. infusion of 1200 mOsmolal NaCl at 0.3 ml · min–1 and utilizing only the salt glands to excrete the load, infusion of AII for 30 min consistently inhibited salt gland function in a dose-dependent manner.In birds given i.v. infusion of 500 mOsmolal NaCl at 0.72 ml · min–1 and utilizing both salt glands and kidneys to excrete the load, each dose of AII given for 2 h inhibited salt gland function but stimulated the kidney, so that the overall outputs of salt and water were enhanced and showed significant (2P<0.01) positive correlations with plasma AII.In birds given i.v. infusion of 200 mOsmolal glucose at 0.5 ml · min–1 and utilizing only the kidneys to excrete the load, low doses of AII (5 and 15 ng · kg–1 · min–1) caused renal salt and water retention, whereas a high dose (45 ng · kg–1 · min–1) stimulated salt and water output.The actions of plasma AII in kelp gulls support the concept that this hormone plays a vital role in avian osmoregulation, having effects on both salt gland and kidney function. Elevation of plasma AII consistently inhibits actively secreting salt glands, but its effects upon renal excretion depend primarily on the osmotic status as well as on the plasma AII concentration. In conditions of salt and volume loading doses of AII stimulate sodium and water excretion. With salt and volume depletion, the action of AII is bi-phasic with low doses promoting renal sodium and water retention but high circulating levels causing natriuresis and diuresis.  相似文献   

4.
Summary The intestinal caeca reabsorb urinary sodium chloride (NaCl) and water (Rice and Skadhauge 1982). Free water may be generated if the reabsorbed NaCl is secreted via salt gland secretion (Schmidt-Nielsen et al. 1958). Therefore ceacal ligation should (a) reduce hingut NaCl and water reabsorption, (b) enhance the increase in plasma osmolality during saline acclimation, and (c) affect drakes more than ducks. Twelve Pekin drakes and 13 Pekin ducks, Anas platyrhynchos, were caecally ligated or sham operated before acclimation to 450 mmol · 1 NaCl. Body mass, hematocrit, plasma osmolality, and inonic concentrations of plasma, cloacal fluid, and salt gland secretion were measured after each increase in drinking water salinity. Osmoregulatory organ masses were determined. Caecal ligation did not effect plasma osmolality or ion concentrations of plasma, cloacal fluid, or salt gland secretion, but reduced salt gland size in ducks. Drakes and ducks drinking fresh water had the same hematocrit, plasma osmolality, and plasma concentrations of Na+ and Cl. In both sexes exposure to 75 mmol · 1-1 NaCl significantly decreased plasma [Na+] and doubled cloacal fluid [Na+]. Exposure to 450 mmol · 1-1 NaCl decreased body mass and increased hematocrit, plasma [Na+], [Cl], and plasma osmolality (more in drakes than in ducks); cloacal fluid osmolality nearly doubled compared to freshwater-adapted ducks, due mainly to osmolytes other than Na+ and Cl. The [Cl] in salt gland secretion only slightly exceeded drinking water [Cl].Abbreviations AVT antiduretic hormone - CF cloacal fluid - ECFV extraoellular fluid volume - FW freshwater acclimated - Hct hematocrit - MDWE mean daily water flux - [Na +]cf cloacal fluid sodium concentration - [Na +]pl plasma sodium concentration - Osm cf cloacal fluid osmolality - Osm pl plasma osmolality - SGS salt gland secretion - TBW total body water  相似文献   

5.
Summary Atlantic salmon may return to the sea after spawning in fresh water. These fish, known as kelts, reportedly show a limited ability to hypoosmoregulate. However, this study shows that fresh-water-adapted kelts exposed to seawater demonstrate rapid adaptation (within 48 h) in osmoregulatory parameters to values characteristic of seawater-adapted salmonids. The urine flow rate falls from 1.2 to 0.2 ml·kg-1·h-1 within 24 h. Over the same period, urine osmolality increases from 48 mosmol·kg-1 to become isosmotic with the plasma, and Mg2+ secretion by the kidney tubules elevates the urine concentration from 0.5 to 100 mmol·l-1. As is characteristic for marine teleosts, kelts drink seawater and process the ingested water in the gut to replace body water lost by osmosis to the hyperosmotic medium. Seawater exposure causes a marked hypoxia, arterial oxygen tension falling by 43% within minutes and persisting for at least 4 days at this low level. This is associated with large changes in blood pH and acid-base balance. The physiological mechanisms involved in adaptation to a hyperosmotic external medium are discussed, and the osmoregulatory capacity of kelts is compared with that of salmon at other stages of the life cycle.Abbreviations FW fresh water - GFR glomerular filtration rate - Hb haemoglobin - Hct haematocrit - MCHC mean cell haemoglobin concentration - pHa pH in arterial blood - P aO2 partial pressure of oxygen in arterial blood - SEM standard error of mean - SW seawater - UFR urine flow rate  相似文献   

6.
Summary The effects of water deprivation and intraperitoneal salt loading on urine volume and on various urinary constituents have been examined in two gerbil species of the Rajasthan desert, the Indian desert gerbil (Meriones hurrianae Jerdon) and the Indian gerbil (Tatera indica indica Hardwicke). During summer, hydratedT. indica excreted 0.782 ml urine·100 g-1·d-1 which was about 60.5% higher than the volume of urine excreted by hydratedM. hurrianae (0.487 ml·100 g-1·d-1). During winter, both species excreted around 1.5 ml urine ·100 g-1·d-1. The experimental treatments caused reductions in urine volume inM. hurrianae from 40 to 76% during summer and from 35 to 71% in winter. Similar treatments inT. indica caused reductions in urine volume of 50–82% in summer and 5–60% in winter. The mean increase in urine osmolarity following various salt loading treatments inT. indica ranged from 3800 to 5761 mosmol·l-1 and from 4034 to 6255 mosmol·l-1 during summer and winter, respectively. The mean values of urine osmolarity for hydratedT. indica were 2831 and 3189 mosmol·l-1 during summer and winter, respectively. InM. hurrianae salt loading treatments caused increases of urine osmolarity between 3381 and 5646 mosmol·l-1 and between 4032 and 5434 mosmol· l-1, during summer and winter, respectively, over the values recorded for hydrated animals (summer=3292; winter=3294 mosmol·l-1). A maximum urine osmolarity of around 7000 mosmol·l-1 was found in both species when subjected to 2% salt-loading treatment. The treatments used in this study increased urinary urea level in bothT. indica (3039–4056 mM) and inM. hurrianae (1900–2180 mM) compared to the level in their respective hydrated controls (T. indica=1628 mM;M. hurrianae=1372 mM). The results indicate thatT. indica may be better adapted to produce more concentrated urine thanM. hurrianae.  相似文献   

7.
The effects of dehydration and hemorrhage on plasma ionic, osmotic, and antidiuretic hormone (arginine vasotocin) concentrations and of hemorrhage on salt gland secretion and glomerular filtration rate were evaluated in glaucous-winged gulls, Larus glaucescens. Dehydration for 24 h did not affect plasma ionic, osmotic or arginine vasotocin concentrations; 72 h dehydration significantly elevated plasma osmolality, plasma sodium and chloride concentrations, and plasma arginine vasotocin concentration, but did not affect plasma potassium concentration. Constant infusion of 0.8 mol·l-1 NaCl increased plasma arginine vasotocin concentration and produced salt gland secretion in seven gulls; four secreted well, while three secreted less well. Removal of 20% blood volume during saline infusion immediately reduced (P<0.001) salt gland secretion rate in all gulls. After bleeding, good secretors maintained glomerular filtration rate and urine flow rate; the poorer secretors increased glomerular filtration rate and became diuretic. Blood replacement returned salt gland secretion rate to the prebleeding level (P<0.05) without affecting salt gland secretions sodium concentration in gulls which secreted well, but did not restimulate salt gland secretion in gulls which secreted poorly. Reinfusion of blood had no effect on glomerular filtration rate. Bleeding and blood replacement did not affect plasma arginine vasotocin concentration.Abbreviations AVT arginine vasotocin - ECF extracellular fluid - ECFV extracellular fluid volume - EDTA ethylenediaminetetra-acetate - EWL evaporative water loss - GFR glomerular filtration rate - Hct hematocrit - LB large blood sample - [Na+]pl plasma sodium concentration - Osmpl plasma osmolality - PEG polyethylene glycol - RH relative humidity - RIA radioimmunoassay - SB small blood sample - SGS salt gland secretion - T a ambient temperature - TFA trifluoroacetic acid - UFR urine flow rate  相似文献   

8.
Summary A homogeneous group of 8-week-old Pekin ducks was divided into two groups: saltwater (SW) ducks received salt water of gradually increasing salinity (200–600 mOsm·kg-1) from the 8th to 20th week of age; freshwater (FW) ducks were maintained on fresh water but otherwise treated identically. During the course of salt-adaptation SW ducks increased plasma osmolality, Na+ and Cl- levels, and concentrations of the osmoregulatory peptide hormones arginine vasotocin and angiotensin II. The apparent volume of inulin distribution decreased in SW ducks, but blood volume was not reduced. SW ducks also developed arterial hypotension, bradycardia, and reduced cardiac output in the course of salt adaptation. This depressed cardiovascular performance was associated with enhanced vagal restraint of cardiac function and reduced plasma concentrations of norepinephrine. Salt water adaptation did not alter the degrees to which mean arterial pressure and heart rate changed in response to intravenous bolus injections of catecholamines. The same applied to the osmoregulatory peptides which were, however, effective only at supraphysiological concentrations. The Pekin duck, as a bird predisposed for adaptation to high salt loads, presumably adapts to chronic hypertonic saline intake by resetting the central autonomic control of blood pressure to a lower level.Abbreviations FW ducks fresh water ducks - SW ducks salt water ducks - ANGI angiotensin II - AVT arginine vasotocin - MAP mean arterial pressure - HR heart rate - IV intravenous - CO cardiac output - SV stroke volume - TPR total peripheral resistance - ISp virtual inulin space - ECFV extracellular fluid volume  相似文献   

9.
Summary The effects of increased fluid volume in the closed vascular system on circulation were studied in the leech (Hirudo medicinalis) by intravascular pressure recordings and blood flow measurements.Significant increases in blood volume were achieved by crop loading with hyposmotic (72 mOsmol·kg–1 H2O) or hyperosmotic (300 mOsmol·kg–1 H2O) salt solutions or by infusion of isosmotic saline (200 mOsmol·kg–1) into the vascular system.During the high-pressure (HIP) phase, which maintains the rear-to-front circulation, systolic blood pressure in the heart was not affected. An increase in systolic pressure in the heart was observed during the low-pressure (LOP) phase, which supplies the segmental circulation. Heart rate was not changed by crop loading with hyposmotic saline or by vascular infusion. Heart rate decreased after crop loading with hyperosmotic saline. Blood flow rate in the dorsal vessel was increased by crop loading with hyposmotic saline, but not after crop loading with hyperosmotic saline. In all cases the diameter of the dorsal vessel was not affected. A possible mechanism controlling blood pressure and blood flow in the vascular system is discussed.Abbreviations HIP-phase high-pressure phase - LOP-phase low-pressure phase - CNS central nervous system  相似文献   

10.
Summary Renal clearance experiments were conducted on feral chickens descended from birds collected from a coral island off the coast of Queensland, Australia. Following a control period when 0.13 M NaCl was used as a vehicle for the renal function markers, a salt load was imposed by infusion of 1 M NaCl. The hypertonic NaCl infusion resulted in increases in glomerular filtration rate (GFR), effective renal blood flow (ERBF), and urine flow rate (V), whereas filtration fraction decreased. Haematocrit was reduced and plasma osmolality, sodium, chloride and potassium concentrations increased. Plasma arginine vasotocin (PAVT) levels increased from 31.4±2.3 pg·ml-1 during the control infusion to 56.0±1.7 pg·ml-1 following a salt load of 12 mmol Nacl·kg-1 The sensitivity of release of AVT was 0.69±0.11 pg·ml-1 per mosmol·kg-1. The concentrations of Na and Cl in urine increased, whereas urine osmolality and potassium concentration decreased. The expansion of the extracellular fluid volume induced by the salt loading would tend to suppress the release of AVT, whereas the osmotic stimulus would provide a stimulus for the release of AVT. In this study, GFR, ERBF and ERPF increased at the same time as PAVT increased.Abbreviations AVP arginine vasopressin - AVT arginine vasotocin - ERBF effective renal blood flow - ERPF effective renal plasma flow - GFR glomerular filtration rate - Pavt plasma arginine vasotocin concentration - PAH paraaminohippuric acid - SEM standard error of mean - SNGER single nephron glomerular filtration rate - U/P urine to plasma ratio - V urine flow rate  相似文献   

11.
Plasma atrial natriuretic factor concentrations in Rhode Island red hens averaged 72.1±6.9 pg·ml-1, range 33.4–136.0 pg·ml-1. The intravenous infusion of isotonic saline containing 3% dextran for 2 h produced no significant changes in plasma osmotic or electrolyte concentrations; however, haematocrit changes indicated vascular expansions of 14.4% after 1 h and 21.3% after 2 h and plasma atrial natriuretic factor concentrations were elevated by 190% and 257%, respectively. The intravenous infusion of chicken atrial natriuretic factor at rates of 10, 25, 50 and 100 ng·kg-1·min-1 for 20 min produced levels of plasma atrial natriuretic factor that were directly related to the infusion rate and which, in birds undergoing a steady-state diuresis/natriuresis driven by the intravenous infusion of isotonic saline at 1 ml·min-1, produced dose-dependent increases of 19, 26, 38 and 55% in urine flow rate and of 8, 30, 49 and 77% in sodium excretion. Potassium excretion was significantly increased only at the two highest atrial natriuretic factor infusion rates. The observed correlation between plasma atrial natriuretic factor concentration and vascular volume together with the atrial natriuretic factor-induced modulation of renal salt and water elimination is consistent with the concept that in the chicken this peptide has a physiological role as a regulatory hormone in volume homeostasis.Abbreviations AII angiotensin II - ANF atrial natriuretic factor - AVT arginine vasotocin - BV blood volume - chANF chicken atrial natriuretic factor - CHE chicken heart extract - ECF extracellular fluid - EDTA ethylenediaminetetra-acetate - Hct haematocrit - i.v. intravenous - PCR plasma clearance rate - PRA plasma renin activity - RIA radioimmunoassay  相似文献   

12.
Summary The lachrymal salt glands of hatchlings of the green sea turtle (Chelonia mydas) secrete a hyperosmotic (up to 2000 mosmol·kg–1) NaCl solution. X-ray microanalysis of frozen-hydrated glands showed that during secretion intracellular Na+ concentration in the principal cells increased from 13 to 34 mmol·l–1 of cell water, whilst Cl and K+ concentrations remained unchanged at 81 mmol·l–1 and 160–174 mmol·l–1, respectively. The high Cl concentration and the change in Na+ concentration are consistent with the prevailing paradigm for secretion by the structurally and functionally similar elasmobranch rectal gland. Concentrations of Na+, Cl and K+ in the lumina of secretory tubules of secreting (Na+ 122, Cl 167, K+ 38 mmol·l–1) and non-secreting (Na+ 114, Cl–1 174, K+ 44 mmol·l–1) glands were similar and the fluid was calculated to be approximately isosmotic with blood. In the central canals Na+ and Cl concentrations were similar but K+ concentration was lower (11–15 mmol·l–1). It is concluded that either a high transepithelial NaCl gradient in secretory tubules and central canals is very rapidly dissipated during the short time between gland excision and freezing, or that ductal modification of an initial isosmotic secretion occurs.  相似文献   

13.
Summary Renal clearance studies were performed in European starlings (Sturnus vulgaris) in order to determine the extent of ureteral sodium excretion under control conditions and during an acute, hyperosmotic salt stress. These experiments also estimated the contribution of the lower intestine (colon and cloaca) to postrenal solute reabsorption by making both cloacal and ureteral urine collections in the same birds. A comparison of ureteral vs cloacal excretion rates found significantly higher sodium (9.09±1.30 vs 1.03±0.38 Eq·kg–1·min–1) and chloride (4.15±0.56 vs 1.00±0.38 Eq·kg–1·min–1) excretion rates during the ureteral collections. Fractional excretion of sodium was also significantly higher during ureteral collections, but this value did not exceed 1% of the filtered sodium load during either collection series. Urine flow rate was significantly higher during cloacal collections, suggesting osmotic back-flux of water across the cloacal wall. Infusion of a 1M NaCl solution resulted in rapid increases in glomerular filtration rate (GFR), urine flow rate, and urine osmolality. Fractional sodium and water reabsorption decreased by 11% and 4%, respectively. Glomerular counts and size distribution profiles, measured by in vivo alcian blue labelling, provided no evidence for a reduction in the number of filtering glomeruli during hyperosmotic saline loading. We conclude that renal sodium excretion rates for the starling are similar to those seen in other avian species and in mammals. These studies also provide direct evidence for postrenal modification of urine in this species, even under conditions of continuous flow. Acute hyperosmotic salt stress can, under some conditions, cause increased rather than decreased GFR, indicating multiple regulatory pathways. Finally, there was no evidence in these studies for glomerular shutdown in response to salt loading.  相似文献   

14.
Summary The duct system of the nasal salt gland of the duck comprises central canals, secondary ducts and main ducts. The secondary and main ducts consist of a layer of columnar cells overlying a layer of small cuboidal cells. The columnar cells have complex intercellular spaces showing evidence of Na+ K+ -ATPase at the apical regions. Approximately 70% of surface area of the duct system is external to the gland. During adaptation to salt water the duct system increases in size as does the gland. Although the components of the gland of adapted ducks, including the duct system within the gland, increase in size compared with normal ducks, the percentage volume densities of the components remain similar in both categories of ducks, i.e. the duct system increases in size in proportion to the glandular tissue. The volume of the duct system external to the gland is six to seven times larger than the volume within the gland. Thus, if ductal modification of secreted fluid occurs, it will be most likely to take place in the ducts external to the gland.Total surface areas of the duct system were measured from serial sections of glands and ducts from one normal and one adapted duck. These were used to calculate possible flux rates of water and sodium across the duct epithelium, assuming the occurrence of either water reabsorption or sodium secretion. Although these flux rates are high it is shown that they are similar to calculated flux rates across the luminal surface of the secretory tubules.  相似文献   

15.
Summary The effects of carbonic anhydrase inhibitors on secretion by macropodine parotid and mandibular glands were investigated using anaesthetized red kangaroos. In the parotid gland, acetazolamide (500 mol·l-1) reduced a stable acetylcholine-evoked, half-maximal flow rate of 2.02±0.034 to 0.27±0.023 ml·min-1 (87% reduction). Concurrently, salivary bicarbonate concentration and secretion fell (129.4±1.46 to 80.9±1.63 mmol·l-1 and 264.8±7.96 to 22.3±2.30 mol·min-1, respectively), phosphate and chloride concentrations rose (14.0±0.79 to 27.6±0.85 mmol·l-1 and 5.6±0.25 to 27.5±1.32 mmol·l-1, respectively), sodium concentration and osmolality were unaltered, and potassium concentration fell (8.8±0.33 to 6.4±0.29 mmol·l-1). High-rate cholinergic stimulation during acetazolamide blockade was unable to increase salivary flow beyond 11±0.9% of that for equivalent unblocked control stimulation. However, superimposition of isoprenaline infusion on the acetylcholine stimulation caused a three-fold increase in the blocked flow rate. These treatments were accompanied by small increases in salivary phosphate and chloride concentrations but not bicarbonate concentration. Methazolamide infusion caused similar changes in parotid secretion. In the mandibular gland, acetazolamide infusion had no effect on salivary flow rate during either low- or high-level acetylcholine stimulation. Acetazolamide caused no alterrations in salivary electrolyte secretion at low flow rates, but curtailed the rise in bicarbonate concentration associated with high-level acetylcholine stimulation. Acetazolamide administration did not affect the increase in salivary flow rate associated with isoprenaline infusion, but did block the concomitant increase in bicarbonate concentration and secretion substantially. It was concluded that neither cholinergic nor adrenergic stimulation of mandibular fluid secretion depends on secretion of bicarbonate derived from catalysed hydration of CO2, but a substantial proportion of the increase in bicarbonate secretion during isoprenaline administration, which is probably ductal in origin, is so dependent. In contrast to other salivary glands, including the ovine parotid, fluid secretion by the kangaroo parotid gland during cholinergic stimulation is largely dependent (about 90%) on secretion of bicarbonate derived from hydration of CO2 catalysed by glandular carbonic anhydrase. Fluid secretion during adrenergic stimulation is not bicarbonate dependent.Abbreviations b.w. body weight - PAH p-aminohippurate - PCO2 partial pressure carbon dioxide - PCO2 partial pressure of oxygen  相似文献   

16.
Summary The relative contributions of the intra-and extravascular compartments of the extracellular fluid (ECF) to the control of osmoregulatory renal functions were examined in saltwater-acclimated Pekin ducks. Having established steady-state diuresis and salt gland secretion by continuous infusion of 1 ml·min-1 isotonic Krebs-Ringer-Bicarbonate (KRB) solution, 5% dextran-70 was added to the infusate for 30 min thereby confining volume expansion to the intravascular compartment. General volume expansion by isotonic KRB caused a drop in plasma osmolality by 23 mOsm·kg-1, due to NaCl elimination by the salt glands, and decreases in hematocrit (het) and radioimmunologically measured plasma levels of Arg8-vasotocin (AVT) and Val5-angiotensin II (ANG II), whereas immunoreactivity associated with atrial natriuretic factor (ir-ANF) was increased. Adding 5% dextran-70 to the infusate left plasma osmolality and electrolytes unchanged but was followed by a further decrease in hct and a 36% increase in the plasma colloidosmotic pressure (COP) facilitating fluid shifts from the extra-to the intravascular compartment of the ECF. Plasma levels of AVT and ANG II remained unchanged, but ir-ANF rose three-fold, its increase being three times as great relative to the decrease in hct, as during general volume expansion by isotonic KRB solution. Arterial and central venous pressure measurements did not indicate changes in cardiovascular function. Hyperoncotic infusion initially induced marked antidiuresis with decreased osmolal excretion, despite a slightly elevated urine osmolality. This effects, however, was trasient and not proportional to the rise in COP, but rather seemed to be related to fluid shifts resulting from hyperoncotic loading. With tracer dilution techniques, reductions in both renal plasma flow and glomerular filtration rate were found to contribute to antidiuresis which was associated with reduced fractional water excretion. Salt gland secretion rate did not increase during hyperoncotic intravascular volume expansion but rather tended to decrease. The results of this study are in line with the idea that contributions of the interstitial fluid compartment (IFC) to volume-dependent control of osmoregulatory functions have to be considered. In the present study on saltwater-acclimated ducks, AVT, ANG II, and ir-ANF could be excluded as mediators of the adjustments in renal water and salt handling following fluid shifts due to hyperoncotic intravascular volume expansion.Abbreviations ANF atrial natriuretic factor - ir-ANF ANF-like immunoreactivity - ANG II angiotensin II - AVT arginine vasotocin - BF breathing frequency - b. w. body weight - COP colloid osmotic pressure - CVP central venous pressure - ECF extracellular fluid - ERPF effective renal plasma flow - FF filtration fraction - GFR glomerular filtration rate - IFC interstitial fluid compartment - i.v. intravenous(ly) - hct hematocrit - HR heart rate - KRB Krebs-Ringer Bicarbonate solution - MABP mean arterial blood pressure - PAH paraaminohippuric acid - SEM standard error of mean  相似文献   

17.
The object of the present study was to elucidate whether a glucose load modifies glucose uptake by tissues in brown trout in vivo. By the use of 2-[1,2-3H]-deoxyglucose, plasma glucose disappearance rate and tissue glucose uptake were measured after an intraaortic glucose load of 500 mg·kg-1 (glucose load group) and under normoglycemic conditions (control). We also attempted to determine whether fasting modifies the glucose load disposal (fasted glucose load group). The procedure used to calculate 2-deoxyglucose uptake by tissues was evaluated, and the levels of 2-deoxyglucose uptake were compared with those of 2-deoxyglucose phosphorylation. Uptake and phosphorylation rates were similar in all tissues, except in brain and heart. In all the groups glucose uptake rates were highest in spleen, kidney, brain and gills, and lowest in red muscle, heart and white muscle. However, white muscle was the main site of glucose uptake on a whole tissue basis. The glucose load led to strong, long-lasting hyperglycemia, in spite of the increases observed in plasma insulin levels and in glucose uptake rate by the whole body (control: 4.9 mol·min-1·kg-1; glucose load group: 6.5 mol·min-1·kg-1). This higher rate was due to the higher glucose uptake only in white and red muscles (four- and threefold, respectively). Fasting halved the uptake of glucose by both red and white muscles in the load condition. In consequence the use of exogenous glucose decreased with fasting (fasted glucose load group: 5.1 mol·min-1·kg-1), causing still longer hyperglycemia.Abbreviations bw body weight - 2DG 2-[1,2-3H]-deoxyglucose - 2DG-P 2-[1,2-3H]-deoxyglucose phosphate - dpm disintegrations per min - FGL fasted glucose load group - GL glucose load group - G-6-Pase glucose-6-phosphatase - LG L-[1-14C]-glucose - MS-222 3-aminobenzoic acid ethyl ester methanesulphonate salt  相似文献   

18.
Summary Adélie penguins (Pygoscelis adeliae) carrying dummy instruments were used to determine field metabolic rates using double-labelled water. All penguins injected with double-labelled water showed a marked loss of body mass (-4.5%) during the period of the experiments (20–131 h), irrespective of the time of the breeding season. Total body water averaged 57.3% and water flux estimates of field metabolic rates correlated with double-labelled water estimates of field metabolic rate (r 2=0.68), indicating that Adélie penguins do not ingest significant amounts of sea water. Brooding Adélie penguins had a mean field metabolic rate of 10.1 W·kg-1 and at sea a field metabolic rate of 13.3 W·kg-1, both of which compare well with previously published estimates based on time/activity budgets and respirometry. Mean field metabolic rate in penguins with crèching chicks was 14.1 W·kg-1, and the birds spent 65 h absent from the nest as opposed to previous estimates of 7.1 W·kg-1 and 21 h. The effects of weather, disturbance and manipulation on the behaviour and field metabolic rate of penguins late in the breeding season are discussed. Adélie penguins (crèching chicks) equipped with externally attached instruments spent more time absent from the nest than noninstrumented controls (76 vs 54 h), but had a lower field metabolic rate.Abbreviations ANOVA analysis of variance - DLW double-labelled water - FMR field metabolic rate - MR metabolic rate - RMR resting metabolic rate - TBW total body water - VSMOW Vienna standard mean ocean water - WF water flux  相似文献   

19.
The present study was designed to determine whether the responses of the avian kidney to circulating angiotensin II, under different osmotic conditions, involve an interaction with prostaglandins. The renal effects of i.v. infusions of angiotensin II at 10, 30 and 90 ng·kg·min-1 for 30 min were compared in Pekin ducks given maintenance infusions of either 200 mosmol ·l-1 NaCl or glucose at 0.5 ml·min-1, with and without prostaglandin inhibition by indomethacin. Birds infused with glucose without indomethacin responded to the two low doses of angiotensin II with dose-dependent reductions in water and sodium excretion, whilst the same doses of angiotensin II in salineloaded birds caused dose-dependent increases in the renal exeretion of salt and fluid. Indomethacin treatment in the animals given glucose had no effect upon the antidiuretic response to the low doses of angiotensin II but did prevent the antinatriuretic effect. In the birds infused with saline, prostaglandin inhibition reversed the natriuretic/diuretic action of angiotensin II, producing renal salt and water conservation. The highest dose of angiotensin II was consistently diuretic/natriuretic and independent of prostaglandin involvement in each case. The results indicate that the antinatriuretic effect of low doses of angiotensin II in glucose-infused birds involves an interaction with prostaglandins, whereas the antidiuretic effect of angiotensin II under this condition is independent of prostaglandins. In salt-loaded birds the diuretic/natriuretic actions of low doses of angiotensin II are mediated by prostaglandins so that inhibition of prostaglandin formation unmasks the normal salt and fluid-retaining actions of systemic angiotensin II.Abbreviations AII angiotensin II - ECFV extracellular fluid volume - PG prostaglandin - PGE prostaglandin E  相似文献   

20.
The energy budget, water balance and osmoregulation of the fruit bat, Rousettus aegyptiacus, were studied during normal hydration and during water restriction (oven-dried apple diet). The water input and output were balanced during both normal hydration and water restriction. The kidney of the fruit bat is well adapted to handle the water load from its fruit diet by excreting large volumes (14% of the body mass per day) of dilute urine (113±25 mosmol·kg H2P-1) as well as reducing urine volume (-95%) and increasing urine osmotic concentration (555±280 mosmol·kg H2O-1) during water restriction. The haematocrit, plasma haemoglobin and total protein concentrations did not increase during water restriction and heat exposure, suggesting the conservation of plasma volume. Gross energy intake was not alfected by water restriction. However, digested energy intake and digestibility were significantly reduced. The effective regulation of energy and water budgets during water restriction suggests that the fruit bat can cope with seasonal climatic changes and with variable fruit supply during various seasons.Abbreviations BM body mass - DEI digested energy intake - EWL evaporative water loss - GEL gross energy intake - NH normal hydration - T a ambient temperature - WR water restriction  相似文献   

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