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Progesterone is not responsible for the blood pressure fall in late-pregnant New Zealand genetically hypertensive rats
Authors:R M Boyd  P G Baer
Abstract:In various models of experimental and genetic hypertension in rats, blood pressure is markedly reduced during late pregnancy. The period during which the blood pressure reduction occurs is also the period when plasma progesterone is maximally elevated, and administration of progesterone to renal hypertensive rats has been reported to reduce blood pressure (J. Armstrong, 1959, Proc. Soc. Exp. Biol. Med. 102:452-455). To test the possibility that elevated plasma progesterone is responsible for the blood pressure reduction in late pregnancy, on Day 14 of pregnancy a group of New Zealand genetically hypertensive (NZGH) rats was ovariectomized and implanted with progesterone-filled capsules, to maintain plasma progesterone at low levels just sufficient to maintain pregnancy, and compared with intact, pregnant NZGH. Ovariectomy did not alter the characteristic course of blood pressure reduction seen in late-pregnant intact NZGH rats. In addition, daily administration of progesterone (15 mg/kg, sc) for 14 days did not alter blood pressure of either nonpregnant NZGH rats or New Zealand normotensive rats with chronic 1-kidney, 1-clip hypertension. It is concluded that blood pressure of NZGH rats is reduced to near normotensive levels in late pregnancy, as reported for other models of rat hypertension, but that elevated plasma progesterone levels are not requisite for that reduction and do not reduce blood pressure of renal hypertensive rats.
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