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1.
Using pancreactectomized (PX) dogs, we recently suggested the importance of glucagon in modulating amino acid-induced increases in renal blood flow (RBF) and glomerular filtration rate (GFR). We have now ascertained whether glucagon's modulatory effect is associated with an impairment in renal autoregulation. As renal arterial pressure (RAP) was reduced to 70 mmHg (the lower limit of the autoregulatory range) in both sham-operated control (C) and PX control dogs, RBF and GFR remained at values that were greater than 90% of their respective controls. In control dogs infused with amino acids (0.051 mmol/kg per min, i.v.), RBF and GFR rose by 26 and 27%, respectively, at baseline RAP. As RAP was reduced to 70 mmHg, RBF and GFR fell by 25 and 37%, respectively. In PX dogs infused with either amino acids or glucagon (0.86 pmol/kg per min, i.v.) alone, RBF and GFR did not increase appreciably at baseline RAP. As RAP was reduced to 70 mmHg in these dogs, RBF and GFR remained at values that were greater than 90% of their respective controls. Yet, in PX dogs infused simultaneously with amino acids and glucagon, RBF and GFR rose by 22 and 24%, respectively, at baseline RAP. Moreover, as RAP was reduced to 70 mmHg, RBF and GFR fell by 22 and 31%, respectively. These data suggest that the ability of glucagon to modulate the renal hemodynamic response to amino acid infusion involves an impairment in renal autoregulation.  相似文献   

2.
Although recent data point to a possible indirect role for galanin in modulating renal blood flow (RBF) and fluid homeostasis in experimental animals, there have been no systematic studies exploring the possible direct effects of the peptide on the mammalian kidney. We ascertained the RBF, glomerular filtration rate (GFR) and plasma glucose responses to direct intrarenal infusion of three progressively increasing doses of synthetic galanin in anesthetized dogs. A 50 ng/kg per min dose (n = 6) failed to affect RBF, GFR or arterial plasma glucose (APG). Yet, a 100 ng/kg per min dose elevated RBF and GFR by 13 and 14%, respectively, while concomitantly increasing APG by 38%. At 200 ng/kg per min, galanin elevated RBF and GFR by 32 and 33%, respectively, while elevating APG by 57%. Intrarenal infusion of glucose (12.5 mg/kg per min; n = 6), reproducing the percentage rise in glucose (62%) elicited by the highest dose of galanin, elevated RBF and GFR by 20 and 23%, respectively. These data indicate that the elevated plasma glucose level, stimulated by galanin infusion, may account for about 63 and 70% of the RBF and GFR responses, respectively, elicited by galanin infusion at the 200 ng dose. The factors mediating the remaining renal hyperemia and hyperfiltration await resolution.  相似文献   

3.
Glucagon in small intravenous (i.v.) doses markedly increases glomerular filtration rate (GFR) in normal anesthetized dogs. In this study, the effects of glucagon 5 mug/min (i.v.) on renal hemodynamics was tested in four canine models of acute pre-renal failure (hemorrhage, barbiturate overdose; renal arterial clamping and renal arterial infusions of noradrenaline) and in a model of unilateral acute tubular necrosis at 4 h and 6-7 days following completion of the ischemic insult. Following hemorrhage and barbiturate excess, with arterial blood pressure maintained at 65-70 mm Hg, whole-kidney GFR and clearance rate of p-aminohippurate decreased by 50-70%. During this reduction of perfusion pressure, the subsequent infusion of glucagon increased GFR by 90-130%. In models where arterial pressure was normal during the period of ischemia (clamping and noradrenaline infusion), not only did glucagon significantly increase renal perfusion, but the ischemic kidney proved to be far more sensitive to the hemodynamic effects of glucagon (delta GFR - 120-160%) than the contralateral control (deltaGFR = 30-40%). In three dogs completely anuric following renal arterial clamping, glucagon was able to improve blood flow and restart urine formation. Glucagon, but not dopamine, was able to simulate the beneficial effects of hypertonic mannitol on renal function in dogs with hemorrhagic hypotension. Glucagon was without effect in established acute tubular necrosis. This study, therefore, indicates that, during renal ischemia, glucagon may be quite effective in preserving urine output and perfusion of the kidneys.  相似文献   

4.
The effects of a 60-min intravenous infusion of angiotensin II (A II; 4 or 20 ng A II/min/kg body weight) on renal blood flow (RBF; electromagnetic flow transducer, control value 19-25 ml/min/kg), glomerular filtration rate (GFR; control value 4.2-5.0 ml/min/kg), mean arterial blood pressure, sodium excretion, water excretion, and plasma A II and plasma aldosterone concentrations were examined in 6 chronically instrumented female conscious beagle dogs kept on three different dietary sodium intakes (SI): SI 0.5 or SI 2.5 mmol Na/kg/day or SI 4.5 mmol Na/kg/day plus an oral saline load prior to the experiment SI 4.5(+) dogs. Four nanograms A II decreased RBF and GFR in SI 4.5(+) dogs without changing the filtration fraction (FF%); in SI 0.5 dogs the RBF decreased, and the FF% increased. Twenty nanograms A II decreased RBF and increased FF% in all dietary protocols, less in SI 4.5(+) dogs. The mean arterial blood pressure increased in all dietary protocols by 10-15 mm Hg (4 ng A II) and 32-37 mm Hg (20 ng A II). Sodium and water excretions decreased by 32 and 46%, respectively, in SI 4.5(+) dogs at both doses of A II. The plasma aldosterone concentration increased in all but one protocol: 4 ng A II, SI 4.5(+) dogs. It is concluded that when A II plasma concentrations are most likely borderline to pathophysiological conditions (up to an average of 370 pg/ml), the GFR is less decreased than the RBF. This phenomenon also can be observed at lower plasma A II concentrations (average 200 pg/ml), when the renin-angiotensin system had been previously moderately activated.  相似文献   

5.
Glomerular filtration rate (GFR) and renal blood flow (RBF) are normally kept constant via renal autoregulation. However, early diabetes results in increased GFR and the potential mechanisms are debated. Tubuloglomerular feedback (TGF) inactivation, with concomitantly increased RBF, is proposed but challenged by the finding of glomerular hyperfiltration in diabetic adenosine A(1) receptor-deficient mice, which lack TGF. Furthermore, we consistently find elevated GFR in diabetes with only minor changes in RBF. This may relate to the use of a lower streptozotocin dose, which produces a degree of hyperglycemia, which is manageable without supplemental suboptimal insulin administration, as has been used by other investigators. Therefore, we examined the relationship between RBF and GFR in diabetic rats with (diabetes + insulin) and without suboptimal insulin administration (untreated diabetes). As insulin can affect nitric oxide (NO) release, the role of NO was also investigated. GFR, RBF, and glomerular filtration pressures were measured. Dynamic RBF autoregulation was examined by transfer function analysis between arterial pressure and RBF. Both diabetic groups had increased GFR (+60-67%) and RBF (+20-23%) compared with controls. However, only the diabetes + insulin group displayed a correlation between GFR and RBF (R(2) = 0.81, P < 0.0001). Net filtration pressure was increased in untreated diabetes compared with both other groups. The difference between untreated and insulin-treated diabetic rats disappeared after administering N(ω)-nitro-l-arginine methyl ester to inhibit NO synthase and subsequent NO release. In conclusion, mechanisms causing diabetes-induced glomerular hyperfiltration are animal model-dependent. Supplemental insulin administration results in a RBF-dependent mechanism, whereas elevated GFR in untreated diabetes is mediated primarily by a tubular event. Insulin-induced NO release partially contributes to these differences.  相似文献   

6.
Alterations in renal function contribute to Goldblatt two-kidney, one-clip (2K1C) hypertension. A previous study indicated that bioavailability of cytochrome P-450 metabolites epoxyeicosatrienoic acids (EETs) is decreased while that of 20-hydroxyeicosatetraenoic acids (20-HETE) is increased in this model. We utilized the inhibitor of soluble epoxide hydrolase cis-4-[4-(3-adamantan-1-yl-ureido)-cyclohexyloxy]-benzoic acid (c-AUCB) and HET-0016, the inhibitor of 20-HETE production, to study the role of EETs and 20-HETE in the regulation of renal function. Chronic c-AUCB treatment significantly decreased systolic blood pressure (SBP) (133 ± 1 vs. 163 ± 3 mmHg) and increased sodium excretion (1.23 ± 0.10 vs. 0.59 ± 0.03 mmol/day) in 2K1C rats. HET-0016 did not affect SBP and sodium excretion. In acute experiments, renal blood flow (RBF) was decreased in 2K1C rats (5.0 ± 0.2 vs. 6.9 ± 0.2 ml·min(-1)·g(-1)). c-AUCB normalized RBF in 2K1C rats (6.5 ± 0.6 ml·min(-1)·g(-1)). HET-0016 also increased RBF in 2K1C rats (5.8 ± 0.2 ml·min(-1)·g(-1)). Although RBF and glomerular filtration rate (GFR) remained stable in normotensive rats during renal arterial pressure (RAP) reductions, both were significantly reduced at 100 mmHg RAP in 2K1C rats. c-AUCB did not improve autoregulation but increased RBF at all RAPs and shifted the pressure-natriuresis curve to the left. HET-0016-treated 2K1C rats exhibited impaired autoregulation of RBF and GFR. Our data indicate that c-AUCB displays antihypertensive properties in 2K1C hypertension that are mediated by an improvement of RBF and pressure natriuresis. While HET-0016 enhanced RBF, its anti-natriuretic effect likely prevented it from producing a blood pressure-lowering effect in the 2K1C model.  相似文献   

7.
The present study assessed the short- and long-term effect of tempol, a membrane-permeable mimetic of superoxide dismutase, on renal medullary hemodynamics in spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR). Tempol was given in the drinking water (1 mM) for 4 days or 7 wk (4-11 wk of age), and medullary blood flow (MBF) was measured over a wide range of renal arterial pressure by means of laser-Doppler flowmetry in anesthetized rats. In addition, the response of the medullary circulation to angiotensin II (5-50 ng x kg(-1) x min(-1) iv) was determined in SHR treated for 4 days with tempol. Compared with control SHR, short- and long-term treatment with tempol decreased arterial pressure by approximately 20 mmHg and increased MBF by 35-50% without altering total renal blood flow (RBF) or autoregulation of RBF. Angiotensin II decreased RBF and MBF dose dependently (approximately 30% at the highest dose) in control SHR. In SHR treated with tempol, angiotensin II decreased RBF (approximately 30% at the highest dose) but did not alter MBF significantly. These data indicate that the antihypertensive effect of short- and long-term administration of tempol in SHR is associated with a selective increase in MBF. Tempol also reduced the sensitivity of MBF to angiotensin II. Taken together, these data support the idea that tempol enhances vasodilator mechanisms of the medullary circulation, possibly by interacting with the nitric oxide system. Increased MBF and reduced sensitivity of MBF to angiotensin II may contribute to the antihypertensive action of tempol in SHR.  相似文献   

8.
W H Waugh  T E Bales 《Life sciences》1988,42(15):1447-1454
To determine if indomethacin (indo) would attenuate the effects of changed renal perfusion pressure on sodium excretion as reported by others, we performed clearance studies in chloralose-anesthetized dogs without the major stress of laparotomy. Mean renal arterial pressure was varied by a balloon-tipped catheter indwelling the aorta suprarenally. With pressure decreases to mean values above 85 mm Hg during isotonic saline infusion, sodium output decreased only by 10.7 +/- 2.4% per 10 mm Hg pressure decrease without indo pre-treatment but decreased by 22.0 +/- 3.8% per 10 mm Hg pressure decrease with indo pre-treatment. The greater, rather than lesser, pressure effect on excretory function after indo in these experiments with chloralose anesthesia suggest that renal prostaglandin (PG) activity does not mediate normally pressure natriuresis. Instead, the data suggest that, in the absence of major stress, the renal pressure effects on excretory function may become more sensitive after indo. In addition, we postulate that the normal acute pressure natriuresis may be modest and may average no more than 20% change for each 10 mm Hg change in mean pressure above 90 mm Hg when stress is minimal and when vasoactive preglomerular autoregulation is nearly perfect. This is a phenomenon which keeps intrarenal tissue pressure and urine output relatively constant with arterial pressure elevations.  相似文献   

9.
The acute renal effects of hypoxemia and the ability of the co-administration of an angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor (perindoprilat) and an adenosine receptor antagonist (theophylline) to prevent these effects were assessed in anesthetized and mechanically-ventilated rabbits. Renal blood flow (RBF) and glomerular filtration rate (GFR) were determined by the clearances of para-aminohippuric acid and inulin, respectively. Each animal acted as its own control. In 8 untreated rabbits, hypoxemia induced a significant drop in mean blood pressure (-12 +/- 2%), GFR (-16 +/- 3%) and RBF (-12 +/- 3%) with a concomitant increase in renal vascular resistance (RVR) (+ 18 +/- 5%), without changes in filtration fraction (FF) (-4 +/- 2%). These results suggest the occurrence of both pre- and postglomerular vasoconstriction during the hypoxemic stress. In 7 rabbits pretreated with intravenous perindoprilat (20 microg/kg), the hypoxemia-induced changes in RBF and RVR were prevented. FF decreased significantly (-18 +/- 2%), while the drop in GFR was partially blunted. These results could be explained by the inhibition of the angiotensin-mediated efferent vasoconstriction by perindoprilat. In 7 additional rabbits, co-administration of perindoprilat and theophylline (1 mg/kg) completely prevented the hypoxemia-induced changes in RBF (+ 11 +/- 3%) and GFR (+ 2 +/- 3%), while RVR decreased significantly (-14 +/- 3%). Since adenosine and angiotensin II were both shown to participate, at least in part, in the renal changes induced by hypoxemia, the beneficial effects of perindoprilat and theophylline in this model could be mediated by complementary actions of angiotensin II and adenosine on the renal vasculature.  相似文献   

10.
P C Wong  B G Zimmerman 《Life sciences》1980,27(14):1291-1297
Participation of intrarenal converting enzyme (ICE) in mediation of the renal vasodilator response to captopril (C) was studied in 7 anesthetized dogs. Blood pressure (BP), renal blood flow (RBF) and femoral blood flow (FBF) were measured and vasoconstrictor responses were elicited by i.a. injections of angiotensin (A) I to the renal and femoral vascular beds. The latter responses served as indices of intrarenal and skeletal muscle converting enzyme activity, respectively. Successive infusions of C were given i.a. to the kidney at 0.4, 0.8 and 1.6 μg/kg/min for 30 min each. RBF and renal vascular resistance (RVR) were unaffected by any of these doses of C. The % changes in RBF caused by A-I were reduced from 45 to 23, 20 and 17% by these successive doses of C, respectively; however, the decrements were not significantly different from each other. When C was administered i.v., 0.5 mg/kg, after the highest i.a. dose had been given, there was no further decrease in the response to A-I, suggesting maximal blockade of ICE obtainable by C. BP, RBF and RVR were further affected by the i.v. administration of C. BP decreased from 146 to 136 mm Hg (P<0.05), RBF increased from 240 to 290 ml/min (P<0.01) and RVR decreased from 32 to 24 mm Hg/ml/min/g (P<0.01). These results suggest that ICE plays a minor role in the renal vasodilator response to C, and implicate an influence of circulating peptides on the kidney.  相似文献   

11.
Glucagon causes marked elevations of glomerular filtration rate (GFR) in dogs when administered intravenously (i.v.) in small doses. The associated natriuresis is thought to be entirely due to increments in the filtered sodium load. In this study, renal denervation, thyroparathyroidectomy, and blockade of cholinergic, alpha- and beta-adrenergic, dopaminergic and histaminergic receptors did not prevent the usual glucagon-induced elevations of GFR or rate of sodium excretion (UNaV). This effect of glucagon was not mediated through the release of cyclic AMP, or by plasma compositional changes of Ca-2+, K+, or amino acids. Pure porcine secretin, in doses of 5--10 mug/min delivered either i.v. or into the left renal artery did not alter GFR; clearance of the p-aminohippurate (CPAH) or UNaV in either hydropenic or saline-loaded dogs. Nor did this polypeptide, structurally very similar to glucagon, abolish the effect of glucagon on GFR. It did, however, partially inhibit the glucagon-induced natriuresis, presumably by preventing a previously undetected glucagon action on tubular reabsorption of sodium.  相似文献   

12.
In the adult, insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I) increases glomerular filtration rate (GFR) and renal blood flow (RBF) during both acute and chronic treatment. To study its effects on the developing kidney, chronically catheterized fetal sheep (120 +/- 1 days gestation) were infused intravenously for up to 10 days with 80 microgram/h IGF-I (n = 5) or vehicle (0.1% BSA in saline, n = 6). In contrast to previous acute studies in adult rats and humans, after 4 h of IGF-I fetal GFR and RBF were unchanged. Fractional sodium reabsorption increased (P < 0.05). However, by 4 days, GFR per kilogram had risen by 35 +/- 13% (P < 0.05), whereas RBF remained unchanged. Tubular growth and maturation may have occurred, as proximal tubular sodium reabsorption increased by ~35% (P < 0.005). Therefore, despite a marked increase in filtered sodium (~30%, P < 0.05), fractional sodium reabsorption did not change. Although the effects of IGF-I on renal function were delayed, plasma renin activity and concentration were both elevated after 4 h and remained high at 4 days (P < 0.05). Despite this, arterial pressure and heart rate did not change. Kidneys of IGF-I-infused fetuses weighed ~30% more (P = 0.05) and contained ~75% more renin than control fetuses (P < 0.005). Thus, in the fetus, the renal effects of long-term IGF-I infusion are very different from the adult, possibly because IGF-I stimulated kidney growth.  相似文献   

13.
Summary Mammalian glomerular filtration rate (GFR) autoregulation can be impaired by protocols that inhibit tubuloglomrular feedback, such as high sodium intake. Domestic fowl were fed diets containing either high sodium (0.39% Na: High-Na Group) or low sodium (0.03% Na: Low-Na Group). An arterial snare was used to reduce renal arterial perfusion pressure (RAPP) in a stepwise fashion to evaluate GFR autoregulation. Absolute sodium excretion, fractional sodium excretion (FENa), and ambient systemic arterial blood pressure were significantly elevated in the High-Na Group when compared with the Low-Na Group, and pressure natriuresis was abolished by the Low-Na diet. However, GFR autoregulatory profiles were identical in birds fed High-Na and Low-Na diets, suggesting that tubuloglomerular feed-back does not contribute significantly to avian GFR autoregulation. Filtering glomeruli were stained in vivo with alcian blue dye to determine if RAPP-induced reductions in GFR are associated with cessation of filtration (glomerular intermittency) by a portion of the nephron population. RAPP was held below the GFR autoregulatory range (experimental group) or was at ambient systemic arterial pressure (control group) during glomerular staining. Reducing RAPP below the autoregulatory range reduced GFR by 50%, but similar glomerular size distribution profiles were observed for experimental and control groups. These results indicate that sustained glomerular intermittency does not contribute to the decrease in GFR when RAPP is reduced below the autoregulatory range.Abbreviations BW body weight - C control - E excretion - FE fractional excretion - FF filtration fraction - GFR glomerular filtration rate - PAH p-amino hippuric acid - RAPP renal arterial perfusion pressure - RPF renal plasma flow - RT reptilian-type - SNGFR single nephron glomerular filtration rate - U OSM urine osmolarity - UFR urine flow rate  相似文献   

14.
Renal excretory and circulatory responses to nicotine were investigated in anesthetized dogs under three sets of conditions: (a) infusion of nicotine into the left renal artery (ia) at a dose of 0.5 microgram X min-1 X kg body wt-1 X 15 min; (b) ia nicotine after 1.0 mg/kg ia propranolol; and (c) ia nicotine after bilateral adrenalectomy. Measured and calculated left and right renal excretory variables included sodium, potassium, and chloride excretion rates (UNaV, UKV, and UClV, respectively), total solute excretion (UOsV), glomerular filtration rate (GFR), fractional sodium excretion (FENa), and urine flow rate. Systemic arterial pressure and left renal artery blood flow (RBF) were also measured. In seven intact dogs administered nicotine alone, there were significant increases in UNaV, UClV, UOsV, GFR, and urine flow rates from both kidneys. However, nicotine did not significantly affect UKV, FENa, arterial pressure, or RBF. The lack of circulatory effects of nicotine was also observed after either propranolol or adrenalectomy. However, when nicotine was administered after propranolol, the drug evoked significant decreases in UOsV, UNaV, UClV, and GFR, compared with prenicotine values. When nicotine was administered after bilateral adrenalectomy, the drug evoked decreases in the excretory parameters similar to those observed after propranolol. These findings seem to support several inferences: (a) nicotine stimulates renal excretory functions-the alkaloid is saluretic and diuretic; (b) the action of nicotine on the kidney is mediated mainly by the release of catecholamines from the adrenal medulla; (c) catecholamines released by nicotine act mainly on beta-adrenergic receptors; and (d) the saluresis prompted by the release of catecholamines in response to nicotine is due to a subsequent increase in GFR.  相似文献   

15.
To examine the effects of intrauterine growth restriction and acute severe oxygen deprivation on renal blood flow (RBF), renovascular resistance (RVR), and renal excretory functions in newborns, studies were conducted on 1-day-old anesthetized piglets divided into groups of normal weight (NW, n = 14) and intrauterine growth-restricted (IUGR, n = 14) animals. Physiological parameters, RBF, RVR, and urinary flow, were similar in NW and IUGR piglets, but glomerular filtration rate (GFR) and filtration fraction were significantly less in IUGR animals (P < 0.05). An induced 1-h severe hypoxia (arterial PO(2) = 19 +/- 4 mmHg) resulted in, for both groups, a pronounced metabolic acidosis, strongly reduced RBF, and increased fractional sodium excretion (FSE; P < 0.05) with a less-pronounced increase of RVR and arterial catecolamines in IUGR piglets. Of significance was a smaller decrease in RBF for IUGR piglets (P < 0.05). Early recovery showed a transient period of diuresis with increased osmotic clearance and elevated FSE in both groups (P < 0.05). However, GFR and renal O(2) delivery remained reduced in NW piglets (P < 0.05). We conclude that, in newborn IUGR piglets, RBF is maintained, although GFR is compromised. Severe hypoxemia induces similar alterations of renal excretion in newborn piglets. However, the less-pronounced RBF reduction during hypoxemia indicates an improved adaptation of newborn IUGR piglets on periods of severely disturbed oxygenation. Furthermore, newborn piglets reestablish the ability for urine concentration and adequate sodium reabsorption early after reoxygenation so that a sustained acute renal failure was prevented.  相似文献   

16.
It has been shown that monoclonal anti-P-selectin antibody administration protects renal function in an ischemic model of acute renal failure. This study was designed to evaluate the effect of administration of fucoidan, P-selectin inhibitor, on reduction in renal blood flow induced by ischemia/reperfusion injury in the rat. Experiments were performed on male Wistar rats weighting 35-400 g. The systemic blood pressure (mm Hg) (BP) and renal blood flow (RBF) were monitored continuously and renal vascular resistance (RVR) was calculated. After 20 min period of stabilization animals (6 rats in each group) received one of the following agents administered by continuous i.v. infusion during 165 min: 1 mg/kg of body weight of fucoidan (F1), 10 mg/kg of fucoidan (F10), 100 mg/kg of fucoidan (F100), 10 mg/kg of heparin (H), or 0.9% NaCl solution (control). After 15 min of drug administration the renal vessels of the both kidney were occluded with vascular clamps for 60 min. There were no significant changes in the initial values of RBF, RVR and BP between groups. None procedure affected significantly BP during all experiments. In F10 RBF returned to the initial values in 70th min of reperfusion and did not change up to 90th min. This value was significantly higher than respective value in the control group. In F1 group RBF in 90th min was also higher than in the control group, but it was not statistically significant. The dose of heparine and fucoidan used in the H and F100 groups failed to preserve RBF during reperfusion. In the present study we found that administration of fucoidan--P-selectin inhibitor, increases significantly postischemic renal blood flow and may have renoprotective activity.  相似文献   

17.
NHE3 Na(+)/H(+) exchanger knockout (Nhe3(-/-)) mice have severe absorptive deficits in the kidney proximal tubule and intestinal tract. The resulting hypovolemia has confounded efforts to carefully evaluate the specific effects of NHE3 deficiency on kidney function. Development of mice with transgenic expression of NHE3 in the small intestine (tgNhe3(-/-)) has allowed us to analyze the role of renal NHE3 in overall maintenance of blood pressure, pressure natriuresis, and autoregulation of both glomerular filtration rate (GFR) and renal blood flow (RBF). Ambulatory blood pressure, measured by telemetry, was lower in tgNhe3(-/-) mice than in wild-type controls (tgNhe3(+/+)) when the mice were maintained on a normal NaCl diet but was normalized when they were provided with a high NaCl intake. Furthermore, administration of the AT1-receptor blocker losartan showed that circulating ANG II plays a major role in maintaining blood pressure in tgNhe3(-/-) mice fed normal NaCl but not in those receiving high NaCl. Clearance studies revealed a blunted pressure-natriuresis response in tgNhe3(-/-) mice at lower blood pressures but a robust response at higher blood pressures. Autoregulation of GFR and RBF was normal in tgNhe3(-/-) mice. These results show that dietary NaCl loading normalizes blood pressure in awake tgNhe3(-/-) mice and that alterations in NHE3 activity are not essential for normal autoregulation of GFR and RBF. Furthermore, the data strongly support the hypothesis that NHE3 plays an important role in the diuretic and natriuretic responses to increases in blood pressure but also show that mechanisms not involving NHE3 mediate pressure natriuresis in the higher range of blood pressures studied.  相似文献   

18.
This study examined the effects of renal arterial infusion of a selective cytochrome P-450 epoxygenase inhibitor, N-methylsulfonyl-6-(2-propargyloxyphenyl)hexanamide (MS-PPOH; 2 mg/kg plus 1.5 mg.kg(-1).h(-1)), on renal hemodynamic responses to infusions of [Phe(2),Ile(3),Orn(8)]vasopressin and ANG II into the renal artery of anesthetized rabbits. MS-PPOH did not affect basal renal blood flow (RBF) or cortical or medullary blood flow measured by laser-Doppler flowmetry (CLDF/MLDF). In vehicle-treated rabbits, [Phe(2),Ile(3),Orn(8)]vasopressin (30 ng.kg(-1).min(-1)) reduced MLDF by 62 +/- 7% but CLDF and RBF were unaltered. In MS-PPOH-treated rabbits, RBF and CLDF fell by 51 +/- 8 and 59 +/- 13%, respectively, when [Phe(2),Ile(3),Orn(8)]vasopressin was infused. MS-PPOH had no significant effects on the MLDF response to [Phe(2),Ile(3),Orn(8)]vasopressin (43 +/- 9% reduction). ANG II (20 ng.kg(-1).min(-1)) reduced RBF by 45 +/- 10% and CLDF by 41 +/- 14%, but MLDF was not significantly altered. MS-PPOH did not affect blood flow responses to ANG II. Formation of epoxyeicosatrienoic acids (EETs) and dihydroxyeicosatrienoic acids (DiHETEs) was 49% lower in homogenates prepared from the renal cortex of MS-PPOH-treated rabbits than from vehicle-treated rabbits. MS-PPOH had no effect on the renal formation of 20-hydroxyeicosatetraenoic acid (20-HETE). Incubation of renal cortical homogenates from untreated rabbits with [Phe(2),Ile(3),Orn(8)]vasopressin (0.2-20 ng/ml) did not affect formation of EETs, DiHETEs, or 20-HETE. These results do not support a role for de novo EET synthesis in modulating renal hemodynamic responses to ANG II. However, EETs appear to selectively oppose V(1)-receptor-mediated vasoconstriction in the renal cortex but not in the medullary circulation and contribute to the relative insensitivity of cortical blood flow to V(1)-receptor activation [corrected].  相似文献   

19.
Glucagon has been implicated as a growth-promoting hormone in the kidneys of diabetic animals, but its role in the nondiabetic state is unknown. We evaluated the effect of subcutaneous glucagon administration on renal growth in intact rats with two kidneys and after 50% reduction in renal mass. The relative kidney weight was increased in intact rats treated with a glucagon infusion for 7 days (p less than 0.01), but decreased in uninephrectomized rats treated with glucagon (p less than 0.05). Absolute kidney weight gain and rates of renal DNA synthesis were also significantly blunted by glucagon infusion in uninephrectomized rats. These data suggest that 'physiologic' and 'compensatory' renal growth are governed by separate processes. Furthermore, the observation that glucagon promotes renal growth in intact nondiabetic animals supports its possible role as a growth factor in the early stages of diabetes.  相似文献   

20.
Cross-linked hemoglobin (XL-Hb) infused into dogs increases mean arterial pressure (MAP) but decreases blood flow to the renal (RBF), mesenteric (MBF), and iliac (IBF) circulations. These actions differ markedly from dextran infusion (which increases RBF, MBF, and IBF without altering MAP) and may be due to scavenging of nitric oxide by XL-Hb. However, because the hormonal milieu regulating regional circulation is altered during hemorrhage (when XL-Hb may be used), we studied whether systemic hemodynamics, RBF, MBF, IBF, and renal excretory function in hemorrhaged dogs was altered when resuscitated with XL-Hb compared with dextran (n = 6 each). Hemorrhage decreased MAP by 25% due to a 75% decline in cardiac output. RBF, MBF, and IBF all fell by 33, 64, and 72%, respectively (P<0.05 each). There was also a fall in glomerular filtration rate (GFR), urinary flow, and sodium excretion (P<0.05 each). After resuscitation, MAP, cardiac output, RBF, MBF, IBF, and GFR all recovered to basal values with either XL-Hb or dextran. Urinary flow and sodium excretion increased to above basal levels with dextran (both by 3.5-fold; P<0.05) or XL-Hb (by 7.5- and 10-fold, respectively; P<0.05). We conclude that resuscitation with XL-Hb after hemorrhage not only increases MAP, but also restores RBF, MBF, IBF, GFR, and urinary sodium and volume excretion analogously to dextran. The results contrast with those in normal dogs and suggest that nitric oxide inhibition does not impair hemodynamic and renal function recovery during hemorrhage.  相似文献   

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