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1.
《Life sciences》1981,28(21):2329-2336
The effect of intraventricular (IVT) infusion of a subpressor dose (6.25 or 12.5 ng/kg/min) of angiotensin II (AII) on the pressor responses to intravenous (IV) infusion of AII were studied in pentobarbital anesthetized rats. This study was undertaken to determine whether the central iso-renin angiotensin system alters pressor responsiveness to IV infused AII. Pressor responses to IV infusion of AII were potentiated by concurrent IVT infusion of a subpressor dose of AII. IVT pressor doses of AII decreased plasma renin activity, however, IVT subpressor doses of AII did not. These results suggest that the central iso-renin angiotensin system plays an important role in pressor responsiveness to IV AII and that the potentiation of IV AII is not related to decreases in endogenous AII as a result of IVT administered AII.  相似文献   

2.
The purpose of this study was to examine the effects of continuous angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) blockade in stroke-prone spontaneously hypertensive rats (sp-SHR) on the renin-angiotensin system and on sympathetic activity. The pressor response to angiotensin II (AII) and norepinephrine (NE) were also examined after chronic blockade of ACE and compared to that of saline-treated controls. Captopril treatment had no effect on body weight. Serum ACE was significantly reduced on day 1; an effect that persisted through day 6 and day 10. Plasma renin activity (PRA) was elevated significantly on day 1 and remained at this high level throughout the 10 day observation period. Plasma NE was not altered by the chronic ACE blockade except on day 1, where there was a slight elevation of plasma NE in both groups. Pressor responses to AII and NE were not changed after chronic captopril treatment. It is observed that chronic inhibition of the renin-angiotensin system with captopril in sp-SHR resulted in a reduction of blood pressure, reduced serum ACE activity and elevated PRA. The constant plasma NE levels suggest that chronic inhibition of the renin-angiotensin system does not affect sympathetic activity. This study also indicates that long term inhibition of ACE does not alter pressor responses to either AII or NE.  相似文献   

3.
Intravenous injections of renin have been reported to produce a prolonged pressor response in nephrectomized rats which is mediated by angiotensin II (AII) and is shortened by anesthesia. Here we report a similar prolonged blood pressure increase for intraventricular AII but not for intravenous injections of AII. The extended pressor effects of central AII injections following nephrectomy are not due to water intake but may be partially accounted for by a prolonged action of antidiuretic hormone. The central effects of AII may explain the prolonged pressor action of intravenous renin injections in unanesthetized, nephrectomized rats, although an interaction with the sympathetic nervous system at two different sites of action is also possible. It is suggested that the anti-hypertensive action of the kidneys is through the release of a humoral agent, possibly prostaglandins.  相似文献   

4.
Cardiovascular responses to angiotensin II(AII) at the preoptic area (POA) were compared between normotensive Wistar Kyoto rat (WKY) and spontaneously hypertensive rat(SHR) by measuring blood pressure and heart rate under unrestrained, conscious state via a catheter implanted chronically into the abdominal aorta and by injection of drugs into POA through a chronic guide cannula. AII injected into POA at doses of 0.3 ng and 1 ng produced a dose-dependent pressor response, accompanied with a slight decrease of heart rate, in both WKY and SHR. However, in SHR, the pressor response to AII was more than 2 times greater than that in WKY and was quick in onset and lasted about 30 min. When AII in combination with [Sar1, Ile8]-angiotensin II (0.5 microgram), an AII receptor antagonist, were simultaneously administered to POA, the pressor response to AII was strongly inhibited in both WKY and SHR. The results suggest that the pressor response to AII due to its receptor stimulation at POA is markedly potentiated in SHR.  相似文献   

5.
Y H Ku  Y F Jia  Y Z Chang 《Peptides》1999,20(2):171-176
In urethane-anesthetized rats, microinjection of angiotensin II (AII) into either the subfornical organ (SFO), nucleus paraventricularis (NPV), or rostral ventrolateral medulla (RVL), respectively, all induced pressor responses, but the heart rate remained unchanged. Preinjection of [Sar1, Thr8]-angiotensin II (ST-AII, an AII antagonist) into bilateral NPV blocked the SFO-pressor response to AII. Bilateral RVL pretreated with ST-All markedly attenuated the pressor response of the SFO or NPV to AII. Hexamethonium or methyl atropine (IV) also reduced the SFO-pressor response. The results show that All can activate the SFO, NPV, and RVL successively, thereby inducing the pressor response; both excitation of sympathetic nerves and inhibition of the cardiac vagus are involved in this response.  相似文献   

6.
These experiments investigated in the awake rat the involvement of noradrenergic projections to the rostral hypothalamus in the drinking and pressor responses elicited by intracerebroventricular (i.c.v.) injections of 25 ng of angiotensin II. Phentolamine mesylate in doses of 2.5-125 micrograms injected into the rostral hypothalamus produced a dose-dependent depression of both the drinking and pressor responses elicited by i.c.v. administration of angiotensin II. A paradoxical increase in heart rate was associated with a decrease in pressor responses with increasing doses of phentolamine. This response was due to tissue injections, since pretreatment by injecting 12.5 micrograms of phentolamine into the ventricle did not block either the cardiovascular or drinking responses to i.c.v. injections of angiotensin II. Yohimbine (0.33-3.3 micrograms), DL-propranolol (25 micrograms), and atenolol (25 micrograms) did not, but prazosin (0.7 microgram) did significantly alter the pressor responses. Although yohimbine also was without effect on drinking, prazosin reduced the drinking responses. These results suggest that alpha 1-adrenergic receptors in the rostral hypothalamus are involved in the control of both the drinking and pressor responses elicited by i.c.v. injections of angiotensin II. In the case of propranolol and atenolol, beta-adrenergic receptors altered only the drinking response in a nonspecific manner by eliciting competing behaviors. Whether they are involved in modifying the drinking response only remains to be demonstrated.  相似文献   

7.
Sympathetic activity is modulated by angiotensin II (AII), both at pre- and postsynaptic level in the rat caudal artery. In the spontaneously hypertensive rat (SHR), this artery receives more dense sympathetic innervation than blood vessels of normotensive strains. This fact seems to be linked to the enhanced pressor responses elicited by noradrenaline in SHR. In this work we describe, in the SHR, the effect of a chronic treatment with the angiotensin II AT1-receptor antagonist, losartan, in modulating noradrenergic mechanisms involved in caudal artery contraction. The effect of losartan is compared to that of captopril, given at doses leading to a similar decrease of both arterial blood pressure and left ventricular hypertrophy. The contractile response of caudal artery rings induced by endogenous noradrenaline released by low frequency transmural nerve stimulation (TNS) has been studied. Under our conditions, TNS (0.5-1 Hz) induced higher contractile responses in SHR treated with losartan than in the control and captopril-treated groups. This difference seems to be due to an increase of the postsynaptic effect of noradrenaline (NA) rather than to an increase of noradrenaline release from sympathetic endings, since i) DE50 value for NA was lower in losartan-treated SHR than in the other groups, and ii) AII induced a dose-dependent increase of TNS-evoked release of radioactivity from caudal artery segments loaded with [3H]-NA, in both control and captopril-treated groups but had no effect in the losartan-treated group. These results show that chronic treatment with losartan, although slightly enhancing the pressor effect of NA at postsynaptic level, fully supresses the facilitatory role of AII on NA release.  相似文献   

8.
The effects of naloxone and morphine on mean arterial blood pressure (MBP) and heart rate (HR) responses to angiotensin II (AII) were studied in conscious cynomolgus monkeys. Graded doses of AII (0.3, 1 and 3 micrograms/min for 8-10 min) were infused i.v. 20 min apart, preceded by an i.v. injection of either naloxone (1, 3 or 10 mg/kg), morphine (0.3, 1 or 3 mg/kg) or saline. Pretreatment with naloxone (10 mg/kg) attenuated the pressor response to AII (0.3 or 1 microgram/min) by 25-50% but did not alter similar pressor responses to phenylephrine. Pretreatment with morphine had little or no effect on MBP or HR responses to AII.  相似文献   

9.
The effect of intracerebroventricular (ICV) injection of atrial natriuretic factor (ANF) on drinking and pressor responses induced by centrally administered angiotensin II (AII) was examined in the rat. The ICV injection of ANF attenuated water intake induced by AII or 48-hr water deprivation. In contrast, ANF did not affect AII-induced pressor responses. The ICV injection of ANF did not cause recognizable change in blood pressure in spontaneously hypertensive rats or Wistar-Kyoto rats. These results suggested that ANF in the brain is involved in the central control of water intake. Brain ANF may be considered as a selective antagonist of the dipsogenic effect of AII but not its pressor effect.  相似文献   

10.
Vasopressinergic pathways within the spinal cord have been implicated in the control of cardiovascular function. This study was undertaken to determine the mechanisms whereby intrathecally administered arginine vasopressin (AVP) increases blood pressure and heart rate in anesthetized rats. The cardiovascular responses to intrathecal AVP administration were significantly attenuated after intravenous administration of the ganglionic blocking agent, chlorisondamine chloride, as were the pressor responses following alpha-adrenergic receptor blockade with phentolamine and the heart rate responses following beta-receptor blockade with propranolol. Intrathecal administration of the V1 vasopressin receptor antagonist d(CH2)5Tyr(Me)AVP completely blocked the cardiovascular responses to intrathecal AVP injections, but did not significantly alter the responses to intrathecal substance P injections. There was no evidence for the involvement of the renin-angiotensin system in the pressor responses to intrathecal AVP, as (i) an angiotensin II receptor blocking agent, [Sar1, Val5, Ala8]angiotensin, failed to significantly alter the responses to intrathecal AVP, and (ii) plasma renin levels did not change following administration of the peptide. Intrathecal injections of [3H]AVP suggest that only small amounts of the peptide may cross into the plasma during the time in which the cardiovascular variables are changing. These data provide evidence that intrathecally administered AVP discretely activates the sympathetic outflow to the heart and vasculature, and confirm the neurally mediated nature of the response.  相似文献   

11.
The effects of chronic ovine PRL (oPRL) infusion on resting systolic blood pressure (BP), heart rate, and pressor responsiveness to acute administration of norepinephrine and angiotensin were studied in adult male Sprague-Dawley rats. oPRL was administered over 7 days, via osmotic pump implanted ip on Day 1, at rates of 0, 0.15, 0.30, 0.60, 1.20, and 4.80 micrograms/hr. Resting BP and heart rate were indirectly determined in conscious rats by tail cuff technique on Days 1, 4, and 7 following pump implantation. In addition, acute pressor responses to ia norepinephrine (4.3 micrograms) and angiotensin (1.25 micrograms) were directly measured via arterial cannula in halothane-anesthetized rats on Day 7 of oPRL administration. oPRL infusion did not alter resting BP or heart rate over the 7 days. However, oPRL increased the BP response to norepinephrine at infusion rates of 0.60 and 4.80 micrograms/hr (P less than 0.01 vs controls). Body weight increases during the study were also greater in groups receiving 0.15, 0.30, 0.60, and 4.80 micrograms oPRL/hr (P less than 0.05) than those in control animals. oPRL decreased pressor responses to angiotensin at infusion rates of 0.30 and 1.20 micrograms/hr (P less than 0.01). These data suggest that, although the vascular effects of oPRL may not be evident under resting conditions, oPRL enhances vascular reactivity to norepinephrine infusion and depresses vascular reactivity to angiotensin infusion. Furthermore, at oPRL infusion rates which affect pressor responses to norepinephrine, oPRL increases body weight gain. These findings support a role for PRL in cardiovascular regulation during conditions of altered sympathetic activity.  相似文献   

12.
Six rabbits were sham operated and were given water to drink (sham-water group); six additional rabbits were sham operated and were given saline to drink (sham-salt group); another six rabbits received an implant of deoxycorticosterone (DOCA) and were given water to drink (DOCA-water group); a final group of six rabbits received implants of DOCA and were given saline to drink (DOCA-salt group). Two weeks later, all four groups of rabbits had approximately the same mean arterial pressures, and the sham-salt, DOCA-water, and DOCA-salt groups all had plasma renin activity values less than the sham-water group. The DOCA-salt group had greater pressor responses to norepinephrine (NE) at several doses than did the other three groups of rabbits. In another group of six sham-water and six DOCA-salt rabbits, measurements of cardiac output before and during infusions of NE at 800 ng/min/kg body wt revealed no changes in cardiac output before or during NE infusion, but the DOCA-salt group had significantly greater increases in mean arterial pressure and total peripheral resistance during NE than did the sham-water group. In another group of six DOCA-salt rabbits, the pressor response to several doses of NE were determined during infusion of the angiotensin II (AII) antagonist, [Sar1, Ile8] AII; this AII antagonist failed to alter the enhanced pressor responses to NE. A final experiment examined pressor responses to NE in six normal rabbits before and after cross circulation of blood with six DOCA-salt rabbits. After blood cross circulation the normal rabbits had exaggerated pressor responses to NE at 5, 15, and 30 min, but not at 60 min. Similar cross-circulation experiments between six pairs of normal rabbits did not show any transfer of pressor hyperresponsiveness. These studies indicated that pressor and vascular hyperresponsiveness in DOCA-salt rabbits is conveyed by a fast-acting hormonal factor and that AII probably is not involved in mediating this hyperresponsiveness.  相似文献   

13.
Experiments were conducted to compare the blood pressure and heart rate responses of conscious rats given intracerebroventricular (ICV) injections of adrenocorticotropin (ACTH 1-24) and corticotropin releasing factor (CRF). Under sodium pentobarbital anaesthesia, rats were implanted with a stainless-steel cannula into the lateral cerebral ventricle and had their right femoral artery and vein cannulated. Upon recovery (24-48 hr later) conscious, unrestrained rats were given ICV injections (total volume 5 microliter by gravity flow) of sterile saline, ACTH (1-24) (0.85 and 1.7 nmoles) or CRF (0.55 and 1.1 nmoles) and blood pressure and heart rate were monitored over the next 2 hr (from the abdominal aorta via the femoral arterial catheter). Both ACTH and CRF caused mean arterial pressure (MAP) to increase, which was paralleled with increases in mean heart rate (MHR). Moreover, these elevations in MAP and MHR were temporally associated with excessive grooming (for ACTH) and locomotor activity (for CRF), which occurred before and lasted as long as MAP and MHR were enhanced. Intravenous (IV) pretreatment whereby naloxone was given 10 min before ICV administration of ACTH (1.7 nmoles) or CRF (1.1 nmoles), showed that naloxone blocked the behavioral, pressor and tachycardic effects of both ACTH and CRF. The results demonstrate that the pressor, tachycardic and locomotor effects evoked in conscious rats by ICV administration of ACTH or CRF are antagonized by naloxone and that their hemodynamic changes may, in part, be mediated by prior behavioral activation.  相似文献   

14.
Input to the nucleus medianus of the preoptic region has been suggested to be involved in both the drinking and pressor responses elicited by the central administration of angiotensin II. Evidence in support of this suggestion has been gained principally from electrical lesion experiments. This lesion procedure does not differentiate between the cells of the region and fibers coursing through the region. To test the hypothesis that cells in this region are involved in both the pressor and drinking responses elicited by central administration of angiotensin II, injections of kainic acid were made to induce lesions of the cells, while sparing fibers of passage. Drinking and blood pressure responses were determined pre- and post-lesion in the chronically instrumented awake rat. Injections of 50 ng angiotensin II in a 2-microL volume into a lateral cerebral ventricle of the conscious rat elicited pronounced drinking and pressor responses with a latency of 3-5 min. Lesions of the median preoptic region produced by injecting 1.0 microgram of kainic acid in 0.25 microL for 15 s attenuated or blocked the drinking response and increased the latency to drink induced by central injections of angiotensin II. However, kainic acid lesions did not significantly alter the pressor responses produced by angiotensin II administration. These results suggest that cells in the median preoptic region are involved in the drinking response but do not participate in the pressor response elicited by angiotensin II administration into a lateral cerebral ventricle of the conscious rat.  相似文献   

15.
Pressor reactivity to a variety of pressor agents after partial ganglionic blockade induced with hexamethonium was investigated in intact, in spinalized, and in chemically sympathectomized, spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR). Responses of unanaesthetized 6-month-old SHR to noradrenaline, phenylephrine, and angiotensin after hexamethonium administration (32 mg/kg) markedly exceeded those of unanaesthetized, age-matched normotensive Wistar-Kyoto rats (WKR). Responses of anaesthetized SHR to noradrenaline after hexamethonium administration (16 mg/kg) were also increased at the hypertensive stages but not at the prehypertensive stages, when compared with those of anaesthetized normotensive Wistar rats of respective ages. In spinalized and chemically sympathectomized preparations after hexamethonium administration (16 mg/kg), noradrenaline produced equal increases in blood pressure in 6-month-old SHR and WKR. It is suggested that the functional sympathetic nervous system is important for the hyperreactivity of intact SHR.  相似文献   

16.
The effects of angiotensin II (AII) and its 1-des Asp analog (AIII) given intra-arterially (0.3–30 ng/kg) were compared in the mesenteric, femoral, and renal vascular beds in anesthetized dogs in which flow was measured with an electromagnetic flowmeter. As has been shown previously, AII and AIII produced similar changes in renal blood flow. In view of the reduced pressor activity of AIII it was surprising to find strikingly similar responses to AII and AIII in the mesenteric and femoral vascular beds. We conclude that the difference in pressor activity of these agents is attributable to something other than differences in their peripheral vascular receptor, and perhaps may be due to differences in their central actions.  相似文献   

17.
A carotid infusion of angiotensin (AII) (10 ng/kg/min) has been found to increase significantly higher mean arterial pressure (MAP) and produces significantly lower bradycardia than AII intravenous infusions at the same dose and rate. Besides, i.v. administration of AII elicits greater impairment on baroreflex sensitivity than carotid infusion of AII does. On the other hand, vasopressin vascular receptor blockade did not modify the baroreflex sensitivity either in the carotid or in the i.v. infusions of AII, and plasma AVP measurements did not change significantly in any group. It clearly indicates that neither AVP nor baroreflex impairment plays any role on the pressor action of AII intracarotid infusions at a low dose. The present results further suggest that baroreflex impairment in rats may unlikely be located in the region irrigated by the carotid artery.  相似文献   

18.
Factors affecting angiotensin II-induced hypothermia in rats   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
K M Wilson  M J Fregly 《Peptides》1985,6(4):695-701
Systemic administration of angiotensin II (AII) to the rat has previously been shown to induce a dose-dependent, hypothermic response manifested by a fall in colonic temperature (CT), a decrease in heat production and an increase in tail skin temperature (TST). The factors mediating AII-induced hypothermia and their site of action were the subjects of the present investigation. To this end, intracerebroventricular administration of 1 microgram of AII induced a 0.4 degrees C reduction in CT and a 2.4 degrees C increase in TST. In contrast, SC administration of 200 micrograms angiotensin III/kg induced a slight increase in CT but had no affect on TST. Pretreatment with the AII-receptor antagonist, saralasin, at either 1 or 10 micrograms/kg, SC did not affect either the fall in CT or the increase in TST induced by administration of 200 micrograms AII/kg, SC. However, the administration of 100 micrograms saralasin/kg, SC attenuated both the fall in CT and the increase in TST induced by either 100 or 200 micrograms AII/kg. Since both the presynaptic alpha adrenoceptor agonist, clonidine, and the opioid antagonist, naloxone, modulate the pressor and dipsogenic responses to AII, their effects on AII-induced hypothermia were tested. Both clonidine (25 micrograms/kg, SC) and naloxone (1 mg/kg, IP) enhanced the fall in CT. Clonidine lengthened the duration of the increase in TST while naloxone had no effect. Pretreatment with the presynaptic adrenoceptor antagonist, yohimbine (300 micrograms/kg, SC), did not alter the hypothermic response to administration of AII. To determine whether vasodilation of the tail of the rat was mediated by AII-induced prostaglandin release, indomethacin (4 and 6 mg/kg) was administered.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

19.
F Rioux  M Lemieux  M Lebel 《Peptides》1990,11(5):921-926
The reflex changes of systemic blood pressure (BP) and heart rate (HR) induced by intraperitoneal (IP) injections of neurotensin-containing solutions (NTCS) were measured in anesthetized guinea pigs whose BP was raised up by intravenous (IV) infusions of either angiotensin II (ATII) or noradrenaline (NA), and compared to those observed in control animals (i.e., saline-infused guinea pigs with low initial BP level). The amplitudes of reflex pressor and tachycardic responses to IP NTCS were either not affected or reduced in animals whose BP was raised with ATII or NA. However, no hypotensive effect was observed, following IP NTCS, in any of the animals tested. The results indicate that high initial BP levels tend to attenuate the reflex increases of BP and HR caused by IP NTCS, the level of inhibition being largely determined by the type of vasopressor agent utilized to raise up the BP. They also suggest that the initial BP level is unlikely to be an important factor in determining whether the activation of capsaicin-sensitive visceral afferents will produce hypotensive or hypertensive effects in this animal model.  相似文献   

20.
Intravenous angiotensin II (ANG II) increases uterine vascular resistance (UVR), whereas uterine intra-arterial infusions do not. Type 2 ANG II (AT(2)) receptors predominate in uterine vascular smooth muscle; this may reflect involvement of systemic type 1 ANG II (AT(1)) receptor-mediated alpha-adrenergic activation. To examine this, we compared systemic pressor and UVR responses to intravenous phenylephrine and ANG II without and with systemic or uterine alpha-receptor blockade and in the absence or presence of AT(1) receptor blockade in pregnant and nonpregnant ewes. Systemic alpha-receptor blockade inhibited phenylephrine-mediated increases in mean arterial pressure (MAP) and UVR, whereas uterine alpha-receptor blockade alone did not alter pressor responses and resulted in proportionate increases in UVR and MAP. Although neither systemic nor uterine alpha-receptor blockade affected ANG II-mediated pressor responses, UVR responses decreased >65% and also were proportionate to increases in MAP. Systemic AT(1) receptor blockade inhibited all responses to intravenous ANG II. In contrast, uterine AT(1) receptor blockade + systemic alpha-receptor blockade resulted in persistent proportionate increases in MAP and UVR. Uterine AT(2) receptor blockade had no effects. We have shown that ANG II-mediated pressor responses reflect activation of systemic vascular AT(1) receptors, whereas increases in UVR reflect AT(1) receptor-mediated release of an alpha-agonist and uterine autoregulatory responses.  相似文献   

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