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Interaction of the Sympathetic Nervous System with Vasopressin and Renin in the Maintenance of Blood Pressure

 

作者: HARALAMBOS GAVRAS,   PETER HATZINIKOLAOU,   WILLIAM NORTH,   MARGARET BRESNAHAN,   IRENE GAVRAS,  

 

期刊: Hypertension  (OVID Available online 1982)
卷期: Volume 4, issue 3  

页码: 400-405

 

ISSN:0194-911X

 

年代: 1982

 

出版商: OVID

 

关键词: catecholamines;renin-angiotensin system;arginine vasopressin;sympathetic nervous system;blood pressure regulation

 

数据来源: OVID

 

摘要:

To evaluate the partial contributions and interaction of three vasopressor systems in blood pressure maintenance, nephrectomized rats and rats with intact kidneys were submitted sequentially to catecholamine depletion, elimination of vasopressin's vasoconstrictor action, and (for those with kidneys in situ) angiotensin blockade. Catecholamine depletion decreased blood pressure and stimulated vasopressin levels in all rats, but significantly more so in the anephric ones. Subsequent injection of an antagonist to the vasopressor effect of vasopressin produced a lasting fall of blood pressure in anephric rats, but only transient fall in those with intact kidneys. Infusion of teprotide — an angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor — in the latter animals also produced transient blood pressure fall, but if this were followed by injection of the vasopressin antagonist, the pressure remained low for several hours. Blood pressure levels were closely correlated with those of plasma catecholamines throughout these maneuvers. Catecholamine levels were inversely correlated with those of plasma vasopressin, which were far greater in anephric rats through both stimulation and accumulation. Plasma renin activity was increasingly stimulated by falling blood pressure after each maneuver in rats with intact kidneys. Thus, it appears that in the resting state the sympathetic nervous system is more involved in the maintenance of blood pressure, whereas vasopressin and renin are important backup mechanisms. (Hypertension 4: 400–405, 1982)

 

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