Cerebral artery responses to pressure and flow in uremic hypertensive and spontaneously hypertensive rats |
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Authors: | New D I Chesser A M S Thuraisingham R C Yaqoob M M |
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Affiliation: | Anthony Raine Research Laboratories, St. Bartholomew's Hospital, London EC1A 7BE, United Kingdom. dinew@tiscali.co.uk |
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Abstract: | Impaired cerebral blood flow autoregulation is seen in uremic hypertension, whereas in nonuremic hypertension autoregulation is shifted toward higher perfusion pressure. The cerebral artery constricts in response to a rise in either lumen pressure or flow; we examined these responses in isolated middle cerebral artery segments from uremic Wistar-Kyoto rats (WKYU), normotensive control rats (WKYC), and spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR). Pressure-induced (myogenic) constriction developed at 100 mmHg; lumen flow was then increased in steps from 0 to 98 microl/min. Some vessels were studied after endothelium ablation. Myogenic constriction was significantly lower in WKYU (28 +/- 2.9%) compared with both WKYC (39 +/- 2.5%, P = 0.035) and SHR (40 +/- 3.1%, P = 0.018). Flow caused constriction of arteries from all groups in an endothelium-independent manner. The response to flow was similar in WKYU and WKYC, whereas SHR displayed increased constriction compared with WKYU (P < 0.001) and WKYC (P < 0.001). We conclude that cerebral myogenic constriction is decreased in WKYU, whereas flow-induced constriction is enhanced in SHR. |
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