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1.
Blood pressure contains a distinct low-frequency oscillation often termed the Mayer wave. This oscillation is caused by the action of the sympathetic nervous system on the vasculature and results from time delays in the baroreflex feedback loop for the control of sympathetic nerve activity (SNA) in response to changes in blood pressure. In this study, we used bilateral renal denervation to test the hypothesis that it is SNA to the kidney that contributes a large portion of the vascular resistance associated with changes in the strength of the slow oscillation in blood pressure. In conscious rabbits, SNA and blood pressure were measured during hemorrhage (blood withdrawal at 1.35 ml. min(-1). kg(-1) for 20 min). Spectral analysis identified a strong increase in power at 0.3 Hz in SNA and blood pressure in the initial compensatory phase of hemorrhage before blood pressure started to fall. However, in a separate group of renal denervated rabbits, although the power of the 0.3-Hz oscillation under control conditions in blood pressure was similar, it was not altered during hemorrhage. Wavelet analysis revealed the development of low-frequency oscillations at 0.1 Hz in both intact and denervated animals. In conclusion, we propose that changes in the strength of the oscillation at 0.3 Hz in arterial pressure during hemorrhage are primarily mediated by sympathetic activity directed to the kidney.  相似文献   

2.
To test whether renal sympathetic nerve activity (RSNA) can differentially regulate blood flow in the renal medulla (MBF) and cortex (CBF) of pentobarbital sodium-anesthetized rabbits, we electrically stimulated the renal nerves while recording total renal blood flow (RBF), CBF, and MBF. Three stimulation sequences were applied 1) varying amplitude (0.5-8 V), 2) varying frequency (0.5-8 Hz), and 3) a modulated sinusoidal pattern of varying frequency (0. 04-0.72 Hz). Increasing amplitude or frequency of stimulation progressively decreased all flow variables. RBF and CBF responded similarly, but MBF responded less. For example, 0.5-V stimulation decreased CBF by 20 +/- 9%, but MBF fell by only 4 +/- 6%. The amplitude of oscillations in all flow variables was progressively reduced as the frequency of sinusoidal stimulation was increased. An increased amplitude of oscillation was observed at 0.12 and 0.32 Hz in MBF and to a lesser extent RBF, but not CBF. MBF therefore appears to be less sensitive than CBF to the magnitude of RSNA, but it is more able to respond to these higher frequencies of neural stimulation.  相似文献   

3.
Extensive studies in the adult have demonstrated that the sympathetic nervous system plays a central role in cardiovascular control. The maturation of the sympathetic nervous system before birth is poorly understood. In the present study, we directly recorded renal sympathetic nerve activity (renal SNA) in five preterm fetal sheep (99 +/- 1 days gestation; term is 147 days). Recordings were performed in utero using a telemetry-based technique to alleviate movement artifact without anesthesia or paralysis. The preterm fetuses exhibited a coordinated discharge pattern in renal SNA, indicating many individual neurons active at approximately the same time. This is consistent with that observed previously in adult animals, although the frequency of the bursts was relatively low (0.5 +/- 0.1 Hz). The discharges in renal SNA were entrained to the cardiac cycle (average delay between diastolic pressure and maximum renal SNA 319 +/- 1 ms). The entrainment of the sympathetic discharges to the cardiac cycle indicates phasic baroreceptor input and that the underlying circuits controlling SNA within the central nervous system are active in premature fetuses.  相似文献   

4.
The evidence supporting a role for direct neurogenic control of renal function was investigated in twenty anaesthetized dogs. Unilateral renal sympathectomy was induced by 0.5 mg/kg/min of lidocain infusion into the left renal artery and the kidney function changes were compared to those observed in the right non infused kidney. The renal parameters were similar in the kidneys during the control periods. 0.5 mg/kg/min of lidocain infusion into the left renal artery resulted in significant reductions of the RBF, GFR, urine and sodium excretion in the left kidney. The intrarenal lidocain infusion induced a small decrease of the arterial blood pressure but this can not explain the changes observed in the left kidney. The modifications of the right kidney function during lidocain infusion were significantly less than those observed in the left kidney. Comparing the measured RBF and the renal blood flow calculated by the CPAH in the left kidney during the lidocain infusion, we have found a marked difference, when the decrease of the calculated RBF was greater. We believe that effects of pharmacological denervation can be best explained by the intrarenal hemodinamically mediated changes. The sympathectomy produces a considerable vasoconstriction in the renal cortical vascular bed, subsequently it decreases the RBF, GFR renal sodium and water excretion. But the lidocain blocks the sympathetic nerves influencing the renal medullary vessels and the renal medullary blood flow increases. These observations are not consistent with the notion that renal nerves are at least partially responsible for the natriuresis accompanying salt loading.  相似文献   

5.
We have developed a system for long-term continuous monitoring of cardiovascular parameters in rabbits living in their home cage to assess what role renal sympathetic nerve activity (RSNA) has in regulating renal blood flow (RBF) in daily life. Blood pressure, heart rate, locomotor activity, RSNA, and RBF were recorded continuously for 4 wk. Beginning 4-5 days after surgery a circadian rhythm, dependent on feeding time, was observed. When averaged over all days RBF to the innervated and denervated kidneys was not significantly different. However, control of RBF around these mean levels was dependent on the presence of the renal sympathetic nerves. In particular we observed episodic elevations in heart rate and other parameters associated with activity. In the denervated kidney, during these episodic elevations, the increase in renal resistance was closely related to the increase in arterial pressure. In the innervated kidney the renal resistance response was significantly more variable, indicating an interaction of the sympathetic nervous system. These results indicate that whereas overall levels of RSNA do not set the mean level of RBF the renal vasculature is sensitive to episodic increases in sympathetic nerve activity.  相似文献   

6.
The arterial baroreflex pathway provides the fundamental basis for the short-term control of blood pressure via the rapid regulation of the mean level of sympathetic nerve activity (SNA) in response to changes in blood pressure. A central tenet in the generation and regulation of bursts of SNA is that input from the arterial baroreceptors also regulates the timing of the bursts of sympathetic activity. With the use of an implantable telemetry-based amplifier, renal SNA was recorded in intact and arterial baroreceptor-denervated (SAD) conscious rabbits. Data were collected continuously while animals were in their home cage. Mean levels of SNA were not different between SAD and baroreceptor-intact animals. Whereas SNA was unresponsive to changes in blood pressure in SAD rabbits, the timing of the bursts of SNA relative to the arterial pulse wave was maintained (time between the diastolic pressure and the next maximum SNA voltage averaged 107+/-12 ms SAD vs. 105+/-7 ms intact). Transfer function analysis between blood pressure and SNA indicates the average gain at the heart rate frequency was not altered by SAD, indicating strong coupling between the cardiac cycle and SNA bursts in SAD animals. Further experiments in anesthetized rabbits showed that this entrainment is lost immediately after performing baroreceptor denervation surgery and remained absent while the animal was under anesthesia but returned within 20 min of turning off the anesthesia. We propose that this finding indicates the regulation of the mean level of SNA requires the majority of input from baroreceptors to be functional; however, the regulation of the timing of the bursts in the conscious animal requires only minimal input, such as a sensitive trigger mechanism. This observation has important implications for understanding the origin and regulation of SNA.  相似文献   

7.
The elevation of renal sympathetic nervous activity (SNA) is a possible cause of blood pressure (BP) elevation. Although a high-fat diet (FAT) often induces BP elevation in animals, the effect of FAT on renal SNA in animals is not consistent between studies. Thus, we compared the basal levels of efferent renal SNA and BP in FAT- or high-carbohydrate diet (CHO)-fed rats. Twenty-four male Sprague-Dawley rats were fed FAT (P/F/C=20/45/35% cal) or CHO (20/5/75) from 5 weeks of age. After 20-21 weeks of feeding, a 24-h urine sample was collected to measure sodium excretion. The next day, blood (0.2 ml) was withdrawn from a femoral artery, and basal efferent renal nerve discharges and mean arterial pressure (MAP) were recorded under anesthesia. Immediately after the experiment, abdominal (epididymal, perirenal and mesenteric) adipose tissues were dissected. Total abdominal fat weight was significantly greater in the FAT group than in the CHO group. The plasma level of leptin was significantly higher in the FAT group, but blood glucose and plasma insulin levels did not differ between the two groups. MAP and renal SNA were significantly higher in the FAT group. In addition, the ratio of urinary sodium excretion to dietary sodium intake was significantly lower in the FAT group than in the CHO group. The data suggest that the increased renal SNA may contribute to BP elevation in FAT-fed rats. The present study firstly demonstrated that renal SNA was elevated with FAT-related BP elevation.  相似文献   

8.
We previously reported that mild deoxycorticosterone acetate (DOCA)-salt hypertension develops in the absence of generalized sympathoexcitation. However, sympathetic nervous system activity (SNA) is regionally heterogeneous, so we began to investigate the role of sympathetic nerves to specific regions. Our first study on that possibility revealed no contribution of renal nerves to hypertension development. The splanchnic sympathetic nerves are implicated in blood pressure (BP) regulation because splanchnic denervation effectively lowers BP in human hypertension. Here we tested the hypothesis that splanchnic SNA contributes to the development of mild DOCA-salt hypertension. Splanchnic denervation was achieved by celiac ganglionectomy (CGX) in one group of rats while another group underwent sham surgery (SHAM-GX). After DOCA treatment (50 mg/kg) in rats with both kidneys intact, CGX rats exhibited a significantly attenuated increase in BP compared with SHAM-GX rats (15.6 ± 2.2 vs. 25.6 ± 2.2 mmHg, day 28 after DOCA treatment). In other rats, whole body norepinephrine (NE) spillover, measured to determine if CGX attenuated hypertension development by reducing global SNA, was not found to be different between SHAM-GX and CGX rats. In a third group, nonhepatic splanchnic NE spillover was measured as an index of splanchnic SNA, but this was not different between SHAM (non-DOCA-treated) and DOCA rats during hypertension development. In a final group, CGX effectively abolished nonhepatic splanchnic NE spillover. These data suggest that an intact splanchnic innervation is necessary for mild DOCA-salt hypertension development but not increased splanchnic SNA or NE release. Increased splanchnic vascular reactivity to NE during DOCA-salt treatment is one possible explanation.  相似文献   

9.
Simultaneous stimulation of the parasympathetic and sympathetic nerves to the parotid gland of rats elicited saliva at a rate dependent on the frequency of sympathetic stimulation when parasympathetic frequency was maintained at 16 Hz. The flow rate was lowest at 2 Hz (sympathetic), moderate at 5 Hz, and highest at 16 Hz. Cl concentration of the saliva evoked with stimulation of both nerves was highest at the highest frequency and flow rate (maintained at the level of 102 mEq/liter, for 35 min) and lowest at 2 Hz (declining from 40 mEq/liter initially to 28 mEq/liter). With sympathetic nerve stimulation alone, Cl concentration ranged from 27 to 58 mEq/liter when frequency was varied from 2 to 16 Hz, and with parasympathetic stimulation alone (16 Hz), it ranged from 132 to 124 mEq/liter. Amylase concentration of sympathetically elicited saliva was, in contrast, highest at 2 Hz (1.5 times the level at 5 Hz, and twice the level at 16 Hz), and nearly 18-38 times that seen with parasympathetic stimulation alone. The same pattern was found when both nerves were stimulated, and at 2 Hz (sympathetic), amylase concentration was 1.6 times the level at 5 Hz and 2.6 times the level at 16 Hz. When the two nerves were simultaneously stimulated, the total amount of amylase secreted over 35 min was twice as high as that observed with sympathetic nerve stimulation alone, at any frequency. The relation of frequency to norepinephrine concentration was examined. There was no consistent difference in norepinephrine concentration related to variation in frequency of sympathetic stimulation. Only when both nerves were stimulated at 16 Hz was there a statistically significant reduction in norepinephrine concentration of 46%. A relation between frequency of sympathetic stimulation, flow rate, amylase concentration, and Cl concentration was established, but these changes could not be directly correlated with quantitative differences in norepinephrine concentration.  相似文献   

10.
The relationship between renal perfusion pressure and urinary sodium is involved in arterial pressure regulation. The aim of this study was to investigate the role of renal nerves and angiotensin II in the pressure-natriuresis relationship. Experiments were performed in anaesthetised cats in which one kidney was surgically denervated. Renal perfusion pressure (RPP), renal blood flow (RBF) glomerular filtration rate (GFR, creatinine clearance), urinary volume (V) and sodium excretion (Una + V) were separately measured from both kidneys. RPP was progressively reduced in two consecutive steps by a suprarenal aortic snare. Two groups of animals were studied: the first without any pharmacological treatment (Untreated), the second during treatment with an angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor (Captopril, 0.4 mg/Kg intravenously followed by an infusion of 0.4 mg/Kg/h). In the Untreated group RPP was reduced from 152.4 +/- 7.3 to 113.6 +/- 5.8 and 83.0 +/- 4.4 mmHg during the first and second step respectively. RBF and GFR were only slightly reduced during the second step of reduced RPP. In control conditions V and UNa + V were greater in the denervated compared to the innervated kidney. The graded decrease in RPP reduced both V and UNa + V in the innervated as well as in the denervated kidney. In the Captopril group V and UNa + V were larger than in the Untreated group in both the innervated and the denervated kidney. A decrease of RPP similar to that observed in the Untreated group, produced similar haemodynamic changes. Also in the Captopril group the graded decrease in RPP reduced both V and UNa + V in the innervated as well as in the denervated kidney. Matching UNa + V against RPP values significant correlations were found in the innervated and denervated kidneys of both groups. Both renal denervation and ACE inhibition were accompanied by an increased gain of the pressure-natriuresis curve, but only renal denervation shifted the crossing of the pressure axis to the left. In the ACE inhibited animals renal denervation only shifted the curve to the left. In conclusion our data suggest that i) at each level of RPP renal nerves and angiotensin II decrease renal sodium excretion, ii) renal nerves and angiotensin II increase the slope of the renal function curve, iii) renal nerves shift to the right the renal function curve.  相似文献   

11.
The effect of prostaglandin synthesis inhibitor indomethacin was studied on renal haemodynamics by radioactive microspheres in untreated control dogs and in animals treated by the alfa-adrenergic receptor blocking agent phentolamine or by the adrenergic neuron blocking agent guanethidine. RBF was reduced by indomethacin. The reduction of blood flow was more pronounced in the inner cortical zones, which resulted in a blood flow redistribution towards the superficial cortical regions. Urine flow, osmotic concentration and electrolyte excretion did not change significantly. Pretreatment by phentolamine or by guanethidine did not influence the effect of indomethacin on renal haemodynamics or renal function. These data suggest that the sympathetic nervous system is not involved in the renal effects of indomethacin.  相似文献   

12.
The hypothesis was tested that low-frequency vasomotions in individual vascular beds are integrated by the cardiovascular system, such that new fluctuations at additional frequencies occur in arterial blood pressure. In anesthetized rats (n = 8), the sympathetic splanchnic and renal nerves were simultaneously stimulated at combinations of frequencies ranging from 0.075 to 0.8 Hz. Blood pressure was recorded together with mesenteric and renal blood flow velocities. Dual nerve stimulation at low frequencies (<0.6 Hz) caused corresponding oscillations in vascular resistance and blood pressure, whereas higher stimulation frequencies increased the mean levels. Blood pressure oscillations were only detected at the individual stimulation frequencies and their harmonics. The strongest periodic responses in vascular resistance were found at 0.40 +/- 0.02 Hz in the mesenteric and at 0.32 +/- 0.03 Hz (P < 0.05) in the renal vascular bed. Thus frequency modulation of low-frequency vasomotions in individual vascular beds does not cause significant blood pressure oscillations at additional frequencies. Furthermore, our data suggest that sympathetic modulation of mesenteric vascular resistance can initiate blood pressure oscillations at slightly higher frequencies than sympathetic modulation of renal vascular resistance.  相似文献   

13.
The dynamic relationship among three major vascular control mechanisms that operate on large fractions of cardiac output: arterial baroreflex and renal and mesenteric autoregulation, was investigated in conscious rats. Wistar and spontaneously hypertensive rats were studied in their home cages 10 days after implantation of pulsed Doppler flow probes. There was an oscillation of blood pressure centered at 0.45 Hz that is associated with operation of arterial baroreflexes. Hindquarters blood flow displayed a featureless, "1/f' power spectrum, in which no autoregulatory or baroreflex signatures could be discerned, although active control of resistance over a wide range of frequencies was evident. The renal pressure - flow transfer function was dominated by an autoregulatory mechanism with a resonance peak at 0.25 +/- 0.01 Hz. In the mesenteric circulation an autoregulatory mechanism was seen with a resonance peak at 0.15 +/- 0.01 Hz and another active mechanism was seen above 0.2 Hz that appeared from its negative admittance phase to be a baroreflex. The center frequencies of mesenteric and renal autoregulation and of the arterial baroreflex were related in a ratio of 1 : 1.7 +/- 0.1 : 3.0 +/- 0.2 (approximately 4:7:12). Such relatively high order ratios can be expected to minimize the possibility of phase locking and (or) entrainment among the various control mechanisms.  相似文献   

14.
We have used the wavelet transform to evaluate the time-frequency content of laser-Doppler flowmetry (LDF) signals measured simultaneously on the surfaces of free microvascular flaps deprived of sympathetic nerve activity (SNA), and on adjacent intact skin, in humans. It was thereby possible to determine the frequency interval within which SNA manifests itself in peripheral blood flow oscillations. The frequency interval from 0.0095 to 2 Hz was examined and was divided into five subintervals: I, approximately 0.01 Hz; II, approximately 0.04 Hz; III, approximately 0.1 Hz; IV, approximately 0.3 Hz; and V, approximately 1 Hz. The average value of the LDF signal in the time domain as well as the mean amplitude and total power in the interval from 0.0095 to 2 Hz and amplitude and power within each of the five subintervals were significantly lower for signals measured on the free flap (P < 0.002). The normalized spectral amplitude and power in the free flap were significantly lower in only two intervals: I, from 0.0095 to 0.021 Hz; and II, from 0.021 to 0.052 Hz (P < 0.05); thus indicating that SNA is manifested in at least one of these frequency intervals. Because interval I has recently been shown to be the result of vascular endothelial activity, we conclude that we have identified SNA as influencing blood flow oscillations in normal tissues with repetition times of 20-50 s or frequencies of 0.02-0.05 Hz.  相似文献   

15.
To evaluate the existence of functional renal dopaminergic innervation in the dog, we studied the effects of direct electrical stimulation of the renal nerves (RNS) with and without blockade of the dopamine receptor (DA1) that mediates the vasodilating and natriuretic response to intrarenal infusion of DA. Before infusion of the DA1 receptor antagonist, SCH 23390, RNS at 1 Hz did not change renal blood flow (RBF) but caused decreased urinary sodium excretion (-53 +/- 9%, P less than 0.01) and fractional excretion of sodium (-47 +/- 10%, P less than 0.01). Stimulation at 4 and 12 Hz elicited marked renal vasoconstriction (delta RBF = -37 +/- 12%, P less than 0.05 and -57 +/- 12%, P less than 0.01, respectively). When RNS (1 Hz) was performed during DA1 receptor blockade with SCH 23390, 0.5 microgram . kg-1 . min-1 iv, the responses were not different than those before SCh 23390 infusion (urinary sodium excretion: -54 +/- 7%, P less than 0.01 and fractional excretion of sodium: -46 +/- 5%, P less than 0.01). Renal vasoconstriction was also not influenced by SCH 23390 (delta RBF = -35 +/- 11%, P less than 0.05 during 4 Hz RNS and -58 +/- 12%, P less than 0.01 at 12 Hz RNS). Thus, the present study does not support the concept of functional dopaminergic innervation of the canine kidney.  相似文献   

16.
In cold defense and fever, activity increases in sympathetic nerves supplying both tail vessels and interscapular brown adipose tissue (iBAT). These mediate cutaneous vasoconstrictor and thermogenic responses, respectively, and both depend upon neurons in the rostral medullary raphé. To examine the commonality of brain circuits driving these two outflows, sympathetic nerve activity (SNA) was recorded simultaneously from sympathetic fibers in the ventral tail artery (tail SNA) and the nerve to iBAT (iBAT SNA) in urethane-anesthetized rats. From a warm baseline, cold-defense responses were evoked by intermittently circulating cold water through a water jacket around the animal's shaved trunk. Repeated episodes of trunk skin cooling decreased core (rectal) temperature. The threshold skin temperature to activate iBAT SNA was 37.3 +/- 0.5 degrees C (n = 7), significantly lower than that to activate tail SNA (40.1 +/- 0.4 degrees C; P < 0.01, n = 7). A fall in core temperature always strongly activated tail SNA (threshold 38.3 +/- 0.2 degrees C, n = 7), but its effect on iBAT SNA was absent (2 of 7 rats) or weak (threshold 36.9 +/- 0.1 degrees C, n = 5). The relative sensitivity to core vs. skin cooling (K-ratio) was significantly greater for tail SNA than for iBAT SNA. Spectral analysis of paired recordings showed significant coherence between tail SNA and iBAT SNA only at 1.0 +/- 0.1 Hz. The coherence was due entirely to the modulation of both signals by the ventilatory cycle because it disappeared when the coherence spectrum was partialized with respect to airway pressure. These findings indicate that independent central pathways drive cutaneous vasoconstrictor and thermogenic sympathetic pathways during cold defense.  相似文献   

17.
Although studies in anesthetized, sino-aortic denervated animals indicate that inhibition of central nitric oxide (NO) causes an excitatory influence on efferent sympathetic nerve activity (SNA) that is normally offset by baroreflex activation, studies in conscious animals have not provided clear-cut evidence for a sympathoexcitatory effect of N(omega)-nitro-l-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME) or the endogenous circulating NO synthase (NOS) inhibitor asymmetric dimethylarginine (ADMA). Thus our goals were to 1) use surgical sino-aortic denervation to test for a sympathoexcititatory effect of intravenous l-NAME in conscious rats, and 2) to determine whether SNA responses to intravenous L-NAME can be extrapolated directly to intravenous ADMA. We recorded mean arterial blood pressure and renal SNA in both intact and sino-aortic-denervated conscious rats during 3 h of continuous intravenous infusion with either L-NAME or ADMA. When we eliminated the confounding influence of the sino-aortic baroreceptors, L-NAME produced a progressive increase in SNA with the peak response exceeding the baseline level of nerve firing by 150%. The same type of frank sympathetic activation was observed with intravenous ADMA. Taken together, these data offer straightforward evidence for l-NAME, as well as ADMA-induced sympathetic activation with direct recordings of SNA in conscious animals. These data confirm and extend the concept that circulating endogenous NOS inhibitors can constitute an excitatory signal to SNA.  相似文献   

18.
In this study the hypothesis was tested that chronic infusion of ANG II attenuates acute volume expansion (VE)-induced inhibition of renal sympathetic nerve activity (SNA). Rats received intravenous infusion of either vehicle or ANG II (12 ng. kg(-1). min(-1)) for 7 days. ANG II-infused animals displayed an increased contribution of SNA to the maintenance of mean arterial pressure (MAP) as indicated by ganglionic blockade, which produced a significantly (P < 0.01) greater decrease in MAP (75 +/- 3 mmHg) than was observed in vehicle-infused (47 +/- 8 mmHg) controls. Rats were then anesthetized, and changes in MAP, mean right atrial pressure (MRAP), heart rate (HR), and renal SNA were recorded in response to right atrial infusion of isotonic saline (20% estimated blood volume in 5 min). Baseline MAP, HR, and hematocrit were not different between groups. Likewise, MAP was unchanged by acute VE in vehicle-infused animals, whereas VE induced a significant bradycardia (P < 0.05) and increase in MRAP (P < 0.05). MAP, MRAP, and HR responses to VE were not statistically different between animals infused with vehicle vs. ANG II. In contrast, VE significantly (P < 0.001) reduced renal SNA by 33.5 +/- 8% in vehicle-infused animals but was without effect on renal SNA in those infused chronically with ANG II. Acutely administered losartan (3 mg/kg iv) restored VE-induced inhibition of renal SNA (P < 0.001) in rats chronically infused with ANG II. In contrast, this treatment had no effect in the vehicle-infused group. Therefore, it appears that chronic infusion of ANG II can attenuate VE-induced renal sympathoinhibition through a mechanism requiring AT(1) receptor activation. The attenuated sympathoinhibitory response to VE in ANG II-infused animals remained after arterial barodenervation and systemic vasopressin V(1) receptor antagonism and appeared to depend on ANG II being chronically increased because ANG II given acutely had no effect on VE-induced renal sympathoinhibition.  相似文献   

19.
This study examined the effect of norepinephrine reuptake blockade with desipramine (DMI) on the spontaneous variability of the simultaneously recorded arterial pressure (AP) and renal sympathetic nerve activity (SNA) in conscious rats. Acute DMI administration (2 mg/kg iv) depressed AP Mayer waves ( approximately 0.4 Hz) and increased low-frequency (<0.2 Hz) components of AP variability. DMI decreased renal SNA variability, especially due to the abolition of oscillations related to Mayer waves. To examine whether DMI-induced changes in AP and renal SNA variabilities could be explained by alterations in the dynamic characteristics of the baroreceptor reflex loop, the frequency responses of mean AP to aortic depressor nerve stimulation were studied in urethan-anesthetized rats. DMI accentuated the low-pass filter properties of the transfer function without significantly altering the fixed time delay. The frequency responses of iliac vascular conductance to stimulation of the lumbar sympathetic chain were studied in an additional group of anesthetized rats. DMI did not markedly alter the low-pass filter properties of the transfer function and slightly increased the fixed time delay. These results suggest that the DMI-induced decrease in the dynamic gain of the baroreceptor reflex is responsible for the decreased spontaneous renal SNA variability and the accompanying increased AP variability. The "slowing down" of baroreflex responses cannot be attributed to an effect of DMI at the vascular neuroeffector junction.  相似文献   

20.
We tested the hypothesis that activation of angiotensin type 2 (AT(2)) receptors, by both exogenous and endogenous ANG II, modulates neurally mediated vasoconstriction in the renal cortical and medullary circulations. Under control conditions in pentobarbital-anesthetized rabbits, electrical stimulation of the renal nerves (RNS; 0.5-8 Hz) reduced renal blood flow (RBF; -88 +/- 3% at 8 Hz) and cortical perfusion (CBF; -92 +/- 2% at 8 Hz) more than medullary perfusion (MBF; -67 +/- 6% at 8 Hz). Renal arterial infusion of ANG II, at a dose titrated to reduce RBF by approximately 40-50% (5-50 ng.kg(-1).min(-1)) blunted responses of MBF to RNS, without significantly affecting responses of RBF or CBF. Subsequent administration of PD123319 (1 mg/kg plus 1 mg.kg(-1).h(-1)) during continued renal arterial infusion of ANG II did not significantly affect responses of RBF or CBF to RNS but enhanced responses of MBF, so that they were similar to those observed under control conditions. In contrast, administration of PD123319 alone blunted responses of CBF and MBF to RNS. Subsequent renal arterial infusion of ANG II in PD123319-pretreated rabbits restored CBF responses to RNS back to control levels. In contrast, ANG II infusion in PD123319-pretreated rabbits did not alter MBF responses to RNS. These data indicate that exogenous ANG II can blunt neurally mediated vasoconstriction in the medullary circulation through activation of AT(2) receptors. However, AT(2)-receptor activation by endogenous ANG II appears to enhance neurally mediated vasoconstriction in both the cortical and medullary circulations.  相似文献   

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