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1.
Systolic (SBP) and diastolic blood pressure (DBP), heart rate (HR) and locomotor activity have been measured at 1-min intervals for 24 h in Sprague-Dawley (N = 5) and for 2x24 h in transgenic hypertensive (N = 4) rats. The animals were freely mobile and entrained to a 12:12 LD cycle (lights on at 0700). The endogenous circadian component of the cardiovascular variables was removed from the raw data, and then correlations between activity and the residual component (raw data minus the endogenous component) of SBP, DBP and HR were calculated. This calculation was performed twice, in the mid-light and mid-dark phases. We have investigated if the mean size of the correlation coefficients depended on cardiovascular variable (SBP, DBP or HR), phase (D or L) or strain (Sprague-Dawley, SPD, or Transgenic, TG, rats). Nearly all correlations were positive and ANOVA's showed a significant effect of cardiovascular variable for both strains, with correlations for HR being significantly higher than those for SBP and DBP. The mean correlations in the SPD strain were significantly higher than in the TG strain for variables SBP and DBP, but not for HR. The correlations between activity and blood pressure were more marked for SPD rats in the light (inactive) than dark (active) phase. Both strains showed ultradian rhythms in all variables, particularly in the light phase. If the analysis was repeated using deviations of the cardiovascular variables from a 1-h moving average rather than the endogenous circadian component, then the results were very similar. The results are discussed in terms of the links between the rhythms of activity and cardiovascular variables, with particular reference to differences between the two strains.  相似文献   

2.
Spontaneous changes in heart rate (HR), activity and systolic (SBP) and diastolic (DBP) blood pressure have been measured in 3 groups of 7 transgenic [TGR(mRen-2)27] rats for 4 weeks, starting at 12 weeks of age, and living on a 12:12 L:D schedule (light on at 07:00 h). Group TG-ENA was given enalapril, an angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor, in its drinking water; group TG-AMLO was given the calcium-channel blocker, amlodipine, by the same route; and group TG-VEH had no addition to its drinking water and so acted as a control. The sensitivity of the cardiovascular variables (CV's) to spontaneous activity was assessed throughout the study period by measuring the gradient of [CV / activity]. For the control (TG-VEH) group, mean HR was highest during the dark phase, at which time the sensitivity to spontaneous activity was least. By contrast, the circadian rhythms of SBP and DBP were inverted, peaking in the light (resting) phase, and there was no reliable difference between the light and dark phases with regard to the sensitivity of SBP or DBP to the effects of spontaneous activity. Enalapril reduced SBP and DBP, but did not alter their phase inversion with respect to HR. However, in SBP and DBP, as well as HR, sensitivities to spontaneous activity were now greater in the light phase. Amlodipine also reduced SBP and DBP and, in addition, greatly reduced the amplitude of their circadian rhythms. With this treatment also, sensitivity to spontaneous activity was greatest in the light phase for HR, SBP and DBP. A simple explanation of these results is that, in the absence of treatment, transgenic rats of this age have DBP and, particularly, SBP values that are too high in the light (resting) phase to permit much further rise due to spontaneous activity, and that this "ceiling effect" no longer holds if SBP and DBP have been reduced pharmacologically.  相似文献   

3.
Spontaneous changes in heart rate (HR), activity and systolic (SBP) and diastolic (DBP) blood pressure have been measured in 3 groups of 7 transgenic [TGR(mRen-2)27] rats for 4 weeks, starting at 12 weeks of age, and living on a 12:12 L:D schedule (light on at 07:00 h). Group TG-ENA was given enalapril, an angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor, in its drinking water; group TG-AMLO was given the calcium-channel blocker, amlodipine, by the same route; and group TG-VEH had no addition to its drinking water and so acted as a control. The sensitivity of the cardiovascular variables (CV's) to spontaneous activity was assessed throughout the study period by measuring the gradient of [CV / activity]. For the control (TG-VEH) group, mean HR was highest during the dark phase, at which time the sensitivity to spontaneous activity was least. By contrast, the circadian rhythms of SBP and DBP were inverted, peaking in the light (resting) phase, and there was no reliable difference between the light and dark phases with regard to the sensitivity of SBP or DBP to the effects of spontaneous activity. Enalapril reduced SBP and DBP, but did not alter their phase inversion with respect to HR. However, in SBP and DBP, as well as HR, sensitivities to spontaneous activity were now greater in the light phase. Amlodipine also reduced SBP and DBP and, in addition, greatly reduced the amplitude of their circadian rhythms. With this treatment also, sensitivity to spontaneous activity was greatest in the light phase for HR, SBP and DBP. A simple explanation of these results is that, in the absence of treatment, transgenic rats of this age have DBP and, particularly, SBP values that are too high in the light (resting) phase to permit much further rise due to spontaneous activity, and that this "ceiling effect" no longer holds if SBP and DBP have been reduced pharmacologically.  相似文献   

4.
The objective of this study was to determine systolic, diastolic, and mean arterial blood pressure (SBP, DBP, and MAP), heart rate (HR), double-product (DP: SBP×HR), and activity levels and their 24h pattern in liver glycogen storage disease (LGSD) patients. A case series of 12 (11 pediatric and one adult) diurnally active LGSD (seven type I, three type III, and two type IX) subjects were simultaneously assessed by 24h ambulatory blood pressure monitoring and wrist actigraphy. Nine subjects were judged to be hypertensive based on the criterion of an elevated 24h mean SBP and/or DBP being elevated beyond reference standards or the SBP and/or DBP load (percentage of time BP exceeds normal values) being greater than 25%. Two of the three other subjects, not viewed as hypertensive based on their 24h average SBP or DBP, exhibited daytime or nighttime SBP and/or DBP load hypertension. Each study variables displayed statistically significant (p<0.001) group circadian rhythmicity. The SBP, DBP, and MAP displayed comparable 24h patterns of appreciable amplitude (total peak–trough variation equal to 17.7, 23.6, and 19.6%, respectively, of the 24h mean) with highest values (orthophase) occurring ~11 h after the commencement of daytime activity. The sleep-time trough (bathyphase) occurred ~4.5 h before morning awakening. The statistically significant (p<0.006) circadian rhythms of HR (amplitude equal to 33.2% of the 24h mean) and DP (amplitude equal to 49.4% of the 24h mean) peaked earlier, ~7.4 h into the daytime activity span. The sleep-time trough occurred ~3 h before morning awakening. The 24h pattern in the cardiovascular variables was correlated with the 24h pattern of activity, with r ranging from 0.50 for DBP to 0.39 for HR.  相似文献   

5.
The effects of a photoperiod reduction in the entrainment of circadian rhythms of systolic blood pressure (SBP), diastolic blood pressure (DBP), heart rate (HR), and spontaneous locomotor activity (SLA) were determined in conscious Wistar rats by using radiotelemetry. Two groups of seven rats were maintained in a 12:12-h light-dark (12L/12D) photoperiod for 11 wk and then placed in a reduced photoperiod of 8:16-h light-dark (8L/16D) by advancing a 4-h darkness or by advancing and delaying a 2-h darkness for 6 wk. Finally, they were resynchronized to 12L/12D. Advancing a 4-h dark phase induced a 1-h advance of acrophase for SBP, DBP, and HR, but not for SLA. The percent rhythm, amplitude, and the 12-h mean values of all parameters were significantly decreased by the photoperiod reduction. When symmetrically advancing and delaying a 2-h dark phase, a 1 h 20 min delay of acrophases and a decrease in percent rhythms and amplitudes of SBP, DBP, HR, and SLA were observed. Only the 12-h mean values of HR and SLA were decreased. Our findings show that the cardiovascular parameters differ from SLA in phase-shift response to photoperiod reduction and that the adjustment of circadian rhythms to change from 12L/12D to 8L/16D photoperiod depends on the direction of the extension of the dark period.  相似文献   

6.
The objective of this study was to determine systolic, diastolic, and mean arterial blood pressure (SBP, DBP, and MAP), heart rate (HR), double-product (DP: SBP x HR), and activity levels and their 24h pattern in liver glycogen storage disease (LGSD) patients. A case series of 12 (11 pediatric and one adult) diurnally active LGSD (seven type I, three type III, and two type IX) subjects were simultaneously assessed by 24h ambulatory blood pressure monitoring and wrist actigraphy. Nine subjects were judged to be hypertensive based on the criterion of an elevated 24h mean SBP and/or DBP being elevated beyond reference standards or the SBP and/or DBP load (percentage of time BP exceeds normal values) being greater than 25%. Two of the three other subjects, not viewed as hypertensive based on their 24h average SBP or DBP, exhibited daytime or nighttime SBP and/or DBP load hypertension. Each study variables displayed statistically significant (p < 0.001) group circadian rhythmicity. The SBP, DBP, and MAP displayed comparable 24h patterns of appreciable amplitude (total peak-trough variation equal to 17.7, 23.6, and 19.6%, respectively, of the 24h mean) with highest values (orthophase) occurring approximately 11 h after the commencement of daytime activity. The sleep-time trough (bathyphase) occurred approximately 4.5 h before morning awakening. The statistically significant (p < 0.006) circadian rhythms of HR (amplitude equal to 33.2% of the 24h mean) and DP (amplitude equal to 49.4% of the 24h mean) peaked earlier, approximately 7.4 h into the daytime activity span. The sleep-time trough occurred approximately 3 h before morning awakening. The 24h pattern in the cardiovascular variables was correlated with the 24h pattern of activity, with r ranging from 0.50 for DBP to 0.39 for HR.  相似文献   

7.
Fourteen diurnally active (07: 00–22: 39 h) normotensive healthy control subjects and 14 kidney transplant patients were studied by ambulatory blood pressure monitoring and wrist actigraphy simultaneously during one 24-h period. In the control group, circadian rhythms in systolic (SBP), diastolic (DBP), and mean arterial (MAP) blood pressure, heart rate (HR), and wrist activity were documented by cosinor analysis with comparable afternoon peak times. In contrast, circadian rhythms with afternoon acrophases were detected only in HR and wrist activity in the patient group. The correlation of wrist activity with HR in controls and patients was comparable. Wrist activity and blood pressure were associated (r = 0.65 DBP and 0.54 SBP; p < 0.05) in controls, while in patients the relationship was weak or absent (r ranging from 0.02 SBP to 0.22 DBP). In 6 of 14 patients, BP and wrist activity were negatively correlated, reflecting the existence of nocturnal hypertension. In eight others, the correlation was small but positive. The 24-h pattern in BP and wrist activity in controls was comparably phased; however, this was not the case for the transplant patients, indicating the day-night pattern in blood pressure in this group is strongly dependent on pathologic phenomena rather than activity level and pattern.  相似文献   

8.
To examine levels and variance structure of systolic blood pressure (SBP), diastolic blood pressure (DBP) and heart rate (HR), we measured those 3 variables every 7.5 min for 24 h (approximately 192 samples each subject) by ambulatory monitoring in 2 nominated groups of normal volunteers: younger (Y; 8 men, 5 women, 24-44 years) and older (O; 13 men, 12 women, 50-95 years). Y and O did not differ in either sleep or wake means for HR and DBP. Mean SBP in O was 17 mm Hg higher than in Y during wakefulness. Thirty-four subjects had significant low frequency variations (presumably the circadian rhythm) in SBP, DBP and HR, regardless of age. A periodic model fitting the time series required a 9 h feature (rhythm) for Y and O in DBP for best reduction of mean square error. In addition, O regularly showed 3 h features in both SBP and DBP, a 6 h feature in DBP and a 9 h feature in SBP, which were absent in Y. Our results suggest that low-power ultradian rhythms may appear in both SBP and DBP after age 50, and possibly serve as dynamic markers of normal cardiovascular aging.  相似文献   

9.
There is continuing discussion on the effect of music (“Mozart effect”) on numerous functions in man and experimental animals. Radiotelemetry now allows one to monitor cardiovascular functions in freely‐moving unrestrained experimental animals. Radiotelemetry was used to monitor systolic and diastolic blood pressure (SBP, DBP), heart rate (HR), and motor activity (MA) in male normotensive WKY and hypertensive SHR animals. Rats were synchronized to a 12 h light (L): 12 h dark (D) regimen in an isolated, ventilated, light‐controlled, sound‐isolated animal container. Music (Mozart, Symphony # 40; Ligeti, String Quartet # 2) were played for 2 h at 75 dB in the animal cabin starting at the onset of L or D in a cross‐over design. Data were collected every 5 min for 24 h under control conditions and during and after music. In addition, plasma concentrations of norepinephrine (NE) were determined in unrestrained animals at 3 h intervals over 24 h. In both WKY and SHR, highly significant circadian rhythms were obtained in SBP, DBP, HR, and MA under control conditions; HR was lower and BP higher in SHR than in WKY. NE was circadian rhythmic in both strains with higher values in D; the increase in NE with immobilization was much more pronounced in SHR than in WKY. The music of Mozart had no effect on either parameter in WKY, neither in L nor in D. In contrast, in SHR, the music of Mozart presented in L significantly decreased HR and left BP unaffected, leading to a small decrease in cardiac output. The music of Ligeti significantly increased BP both in L and in D and reflexively reduced HR in L, the effects being long‐lasting over 24 h. Interestingly, white noise at 75 dB had no effect at all on either function in both strains. The effects of both Mozart and Ligeti cannot be attributed to a stress reaction, as stress due to cage switch increased HR and BP both in WKY and SHR. The study clearly demonstrates that music of different character (tempo, rhythm, pitch, tonality) can modify cardiovascular functions in freely‐moving rats, with SHR being more sensitive than normotensive animals. The relative contribution of the characteristics of the two pieces of music, however, needs further evaluation.  相似文献   

10.
Blood pressure (BP) and heart rate (HR) rhythms were studied in premature infants (299 profiles ranged 24-106 h at 20--min intervals) and 11-13-year-old children (19 profiles for 48 h at 15-min intervals) to explore ultradian-to-circannual rhythm characteristics in BP and HR in preterm human infant and to elucidate the influence of antenatal betamimetic (BM) exposure on adolescent BP and HR rhythms. A circannual modulation of the 3-h amplitude (A) or MESOR of systolic BP (SBP) and diastolic BP (DBP) was seen mainly in prematures with a positive family history of high BP on the father's (f+) side or with both a patro linous and matro-linous history (f+m+), the circannual modulation of HR ultradian A was statistically significant only in "f- m-" infants. In urine collected at 3 h intervals for 24-h spans from 21 premature infants Na+,K+ and 11-oxycorticosteroids had a significant circadian rhythm. 9 adolescents (BM+), which were exposed in utero to different BM doses, had a significantly higher SBP and DBP MESOR and numerically higher circadian A as compared to 10 controls (BM-); correlation (P less than 0.05) between BM dose and HR circadian A was found. DBP led SBP in 8 or 10 "BM-" but in 4 of 9 "BM+" (acrophase difference 17 min and 3 min correspondingly).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

11.
Systolic (S) and diastolic (D) blood pressure (BP) and heart rate (HR) of clinically healthy children (24 boys and 15 girls) 3 to 7 years of age were measured with a standard mercury sphygmomanometer at 3-hour intervals for 24 hours in April 1991. The children slept and/or rested from 2100 to 0700 and napped from 1230 to 1530; they had meals at 0730, 1200 and 1800. A statistically significant circadian and about 12-hour (circasemidian) component of variation is documented for SBP and DBP of boys and girls and for HR of boys. No gender difference was found for the circadian and circasemidian components. A positive correlation with age is found for the MESOR and circadian amplitude of SBP and DBP (p < 0.05); a negative correlation with age is found for the MESOR of HR (p < 0.001).  相似文献   

12.
The purpose was to assess age-related circadian changes of blood pressure profile (BPP) employing a truncated Fourier series with four harmonics (tFs) in patients with essential hypertension. The study was performed on 32 patients with essential hypertension divided in two groups: (A) 15 patients younger than 55 years and (B) 17 patients older than 60 years. Systolic blood pressure (SBP) and diastolic blood pressure (DBP) were monitored every 20 minutes for 24h with a noninvasive portable device (SpaceLabs 90202). To evaluate the existence of SBP and DBP circadian rhythms a one-sample runs-test was performed and the mesor, amplitude, and acrophase from the overall curve of each patient were obtained by tFs. In both groups, SBP and DBP profiles showed a first peak in the late morning and a second peak in the early evening around the same hours. The two peaks in the SBP profile were higher and the two peaks in the DBP profile were lower in older patients than in younger ones (p. 01, p <. 05, p>. 3, p>. 05). The truncated Fourier series with four harmonics evidences different age-related BP profiles characterized by two peaks with higher SBP and lower DBP in elderly patients. These changes of BPP are in accordance with the reported higher risk of cardiovascular events observed around the same hours. (Chronobiology International, 14(4), 397–407, 1997)  相似文献   

13.
Circadian relations among cardiovascular variables of young adults.   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Every 4 hours for 24 hours, 14 clinically healthy young individuals (6 women and 8 men), 26 +/- 4 years of age, measured systolic (S) and diastolic (D) blood pressure (BP) by sphygmomanometer and heart rate by ECG and did impedance cardiography under usual living conditions. Stroke volume (SV), cardiac output (CO) and total peripheral resistance (TPR) were calculated. Time series of SBP, DBP, HR, SV, CO and TPR were analyzed by single and population-mean cosinor. A circadian cardiovascular rhythm is demonstrated by rejection of the zero amplitude assumption in the population-mean cosinor test for SBP, DBP, HR, SV, CO and TPR (P < 0.01). TPR peaks around 0400 (-61 degrees from local midnight), in antiphase with all other variables, their acrophase occurring around 1600 (-240 degrees). A circadian rhythm of statistical significance or of borderline statistical significance is found for all variables except TPR in women. Circadian rhythm characteristics were otherwise mostly similar in men and women with a statistically significant gender difference found by parameter tests only for the MESOR and amplitude of SBP.  相似文献   

14.
The aim of the present study was to investigate the impact of endogenous and exogenous factors for the expression of the daily rhythms of body temperature (BT), blood pressure (BP) and heart rate (HR). One hundred and seventy-three young adults (YA), 17–24 years old (y.o.), of both genders were studied under a modified constant-routine (CR) protocol for 26 h. Participants were assigned randomly to groups with different lighting regimens: CR-LD, n = 77, lights (>400 l×) on from 09:00 to 17:00 h and off (<10 l×) from 17:00 to 09:00 next morning; CR-LL, n = 81, lights on (>400 l×) during the whole experimental session; CR-DD, n = 15, constant dim light (<10 l×) during the whole experiment. Systolic (SBP) and diastolic (DBP) BP, HR and BT were measured every 2 h. For comparison, the results of the former studies performed under conditions of regular life with an activity period from 07:00 to 23:00 h and sleep from 23:00 till 07:00 h (Control) were reanalyzed. Seven-day Ambulatory Blood Pressure Monitoring (ABPM) records from 27 YA (16–38 y.o.) and BT self-measurement data from 70 YA (17–30 y.o.) taken on ≥ 3 successive days at 08:00, 11:00, 14:00, 17:00, 20:00, 23:00 and 03:00 were available.

The obtained daily patterns were different between Control and CR-DD groups, due to effects of activity, sleep and light. The comparison of Control and CR-LD groups allowed the effects of sleep and activity to be estimated since the lighting conditions were similar. The activity level substantially elevated SBP, but not DBP. Sleep, on the other hand, lowered the nighttime DBP, but has no effect on SBP. HR was affected both by activity and sleep. In accordance with previous studies, these results confirm that the steep BP increase in the morning is not driven by the circadian clock, but rather by sympathoadrenal factors related to awakening and corresponding anticipatory mechanisms. The effect on BT was not significant.

To investigate the impact of light during the former dark time and darkness during the former light time, the CR-LL and CR-DD groups were each compared with the CR-LD group. Light delayed the evening decrease of BT, most likely via a suppression of the melatonin rise. Besides, it had a prominent arousal effect on SBP both in the former light and dark phases, a moderate effect on DBP and no effect on HR. Darkness induced decline in BT. BP values were decreased during the former light time. No effects on HR were found. Altogether, the results of the present paper show that BT, BP and HR are affected by exogenous factors differently. Moreover, the effect was gender-specific. Especially, the response of BT and BP to ambient light was evident only in females.

We suppose that the distinct, gender-specific responses of SBP, DBP and HR to activity, sleep and ambient light do reflect fundamental differences in the circadian control of various cardiovascular functions. Furthermore, the presented data are important for the elaboration of updated reference standards, the interpretation of rhythm disorders and for personalized chronotherapeutic approaches to prevent adverse cardiovascular events more effectively.  相似文献   


15.
24 h and ultradian rhythms of blood pressure (BP) have been previously shown to be disorganized in nocturnal hypertensive subjects. The present study was undertaken to further analyze the ultradian and circadian BP rhythm structure in sleep-time hypertensive subjects with normal or elevated awake-time BP levels. Fourier analysis was used to fit 24, 12, 8, and 6 h curves to mean BP as well as heart rate (HR) time series data derived from 24 h ambulatory blood pressure monitoring. Awake and sleep periods were defined according to individual sleep diaries. Awake-time hypertension was defined as diurnal systolic (SBP) and/or diastolic BP (DBP) means ≥135/85 mmHg. Sleep-time hypertension was defined as nocturnal SBP and/or DBP means ≥120/70 mmHg. The sample included 240 awake-time normotensive subjects (180 sleep-time normotensives and 60 sleep-time hypertensives) and 138 untreated awake-time hypertensive subjects (31 sleep-time normotensives and 107 sleep-time hypertensives). The amplitude and integrity (i.e., percent rhythm) of the 24 and 12 h BP rhythms were lower in the sleep-time hypertensive subjects and higher in the awake-time hypertensive subjects. However, no differences were detected when the integrity and amplitude of the 6 and 8 h mean BP rhythms were analyzed. The sleep-time hypertensive group showed significantly higher 24 h BP rhythm acrophase variability. No differences could be found in any of the HR rhythm parameters. Altogether, the findings suggest a disorganization of the BP circadian rhythm in sleep-time hypertensives that results in reduced 24 h rhythm amplitude and integrity that could be related to cardiovascular risk.  相似文献   

16.
Interim chronobiologic cardiovascular reference data have been described; 353 clinically healthy Japanese subjects were monitored every 15 min for 24h on 2 occasions. Special attention was paid to the difference between metropolitan and rural areas. Not only the MESORs of SBP and DBP, but also the circadian amplitudes, were higher in the Tokyo than in a rural area (Komaki, Aichi Prefecture). Age-related alterations in the circadian profile of cardiovascular variables were noted for women but not for men. The average MESOR remained similar for SBP in men, whereas in women the average MESOR increased with advancing age in both urban and rural areas. The average circadian amplitude of SBP also increased with age in women, but not in men. No significant deviations of acrophase with age were found for SBP and DBP in men, whereas in rural women the acrophase tended to occur earlier with increasing age.  相似文献   

17.
In this study, we aimed to investigate the adaptation of blood pressure (BP), heart rate (HR), and locomotor activity (LA) circadian rhythms to light cycle shift in transgenic rats with a deficit in brain angiotensin [TGR(ASrAOGEN)]. BP, HR, and LA were measured by telemetry. After baseline recordings (bLD), the light cycle was inverted by prolonging the light by 12 h and thereafter the dark period by 12 h, resulting in inverted dark-light (DL) or light-dark (LD) cycles. Toward that end, a 24-h dark was maintained for 14 days (free-running conditions). When light cycle was changed from bLD to DL, the acrophases (peak time of curve fitting) of BP, HR, and LA shifted to the new dark period in both SD and TGR(ASrAOGEN) rats. However, the readjustment of the BP and HR acrophases in TGR(ASrAOGEN) rats occurred significantly slower than SD rats. The LA acrophases changed similarly in both strains. When light cycle was changed from DL to LD by prolonging the dark period by 12 h, the reentrainment of BP and LA occurred faster than the previous shift in both strains. The readjustment of the BP and HR acrophases in TGR(ASrAOGEN) rats occurred significantly slower than SD rats. In free-running conditions, the circadian rhythms of the investigated parameters adapted in TGR(ASrAOGEN) and SD rats in a similar manner. These results demonstrate that the brain RAS plays an important role in mediating the effects of light cycle shifts on the circadian variation of BP and HR. The adaptive behavior of cardiovascular circadian rhythms depends on the initial direction of light-dark changes.  相似文献   

18.
Cardiovascular functions (blood pressure [BP], heart rate [HR]) were radiotelemetrically studied in endothelial nitric oxide synthase (NOS) knock-out mice (eNOS-/-) and their wild type C57BL/6 (WT) controls. Studies were performed with and without inhibition of the NOS with the non-specific inhibitor N(omega)-Nitro-L-Arginin-Methylester (L-NAME). Six eNOS-/-and five WT mice, kept under a light:dark schedule of 12:12 h (lights on 07:00 h), were treated with L-NAME in tap water containing different concentrations (94, 282, and 940 mg/kg) each for three days. Under control conditions, the eNOS-/-mice are mildly hypertensive in comparison to WT. L-NAME increased systolic [SBP] and diastolic [DBP] blood pressures in WT mice to the levels of eNOS-/-mice after two days of L-NAME application with no dose-dependency, whereas L-NAME had no effects on SBP and DBP in eNOS-/-mice. In neither mouse strain were the circadian rhythms in BP and HR affected by drug treatment. The similarity of the 24 h BP profiles in eNOS-/-and L-NAME-treated WT mice support the notion that only the enothelial NOS and not other NOS isoenzymes are of importance for hypertension in the knock-out mouse strain.  相似文献   

19.
Animals placed under short light-dark (LD) cycles show a dissociation of their circadian rhythms. However, this effect has only been studied in Wistar rats and with the motor activity (MA) rhythm. Thus, in the present experiment, we studied in TGR(mREN2)27 (TGR) rats, a strain of hypertensive rats, the effect of a short LD cycle on the circadian rhythms of MA, heart rate (HR), and blood pressure (BP). Our aim was [1] to investigate whether the exposure of TGR rats to a short LD cycle induced a dissociation of their circadian rhythms, [2] to study the effect of short LD cycles on the development of the circadian rhythms of TGR rats, and [3] to compare the effect of short LD cycles on young and adult TGR rats. One group of TGR rats was maintained under LD cycles of 22h periods (group G22). The progress in time of their rhythms was compared to that of TGR rats of the same age that had been kept under LD cycles of 24h periods (group G24). For the third point, the rhythms of a group of 5-week-old TGR rats kept under LD 22h cycles (young rats) were compared to those of a group of 11-week-old TGR rats (adult rats). Results showed that there is a dissociation of the circadian rhythms of all the variables monitored in TGR rats maintained under LD 22h cycles, independent of age. We have also found that group G22 showed a higher increase in BP with age and a higher mortality due to malignant hypertension compared to group G24. Finally, it seems that it is harder for young rats to entrain to short LD cycles than for adult rats, and young rats have a higher mortality due to malignant hypertension than adult rats. In conclusion, we demonstrated that short LD cycles produce a dissociation in the HR, BP, and MA circadian rhythms. The results of this experiment, compared to those previously obtained in Wistar rats, suggest that the light perception, the responses of the circadian system to light, or both are altered in the TGR rats. (Chronobiology International, 18(4), 641-656, 2001)  相似文献   

20.
Endothelial nitric oxide synthase knock out mice (eNOS-/-) are mildly hypertensive in comparison to wild-type (WT) mice. Hypertension in eNOS-/- mice is partly the result of an increase in peripheral resistance due to the absence of the vasodilatory action of NO. No data are available for these animals regarding the 24 h blood pressure profile under the 12:12 h light-dark cycle (LD) and constant dark (DD) conditions. Therefore, this study aimed to investigate by radiotelemetry the circadian rhythms in systolic blood pressure (SBP) and diastolic blood pressure (DBP) of six eNOS-/- mice and five wild-type mice under LD and DD. Data were collected beginning 3 wks after operation (implantation of sensor) for 2 wks under LD and for another 2 wks thereafter under DD. Our results show that eNOS-/- mice were hypertensive under all experimental conditions. SBP and DBP were significantly higher by about 15% in eNOS-/- mice. No differences were found in the pattern of the circadian rhythms, rhythmicity, or period lengths during LD or DD. The genetic deletion of eNOS seems to lead to higher SBP and DBP, but the circadian blood pressure pattern is still preserved with higher values during the night (active phase) and lower values during the daytime (rest phase). Thus, endothelial-derived NO plays an important role in the regulation of vascular tone and haemodynamics, but it is not important for the circadian organization of SBP and DBP.  相似文献   

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