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1 Departments of Physiology and 2 Pharmacology, School of Medicine of Ribeirão Preto, University of São Paulo, 14049-900 Ribeirão Preto, São Paulo, Brazil
The objective of the present study was to
determine the contribution of the sympathetic nervous system to the
hypertensive response to acute (45-min) aortic coarctation in conscious
intact or sinoaortic-denervated (SAD) rats. Rats were treated
chronically (5 wk) with guanethidine (50 mg · kg
1 · day
1
ip) to induce sympathetic nerve degeneration or acutely with the
1-adrenergic receptor
antagonist prazosin (1 mg/kg iv). Aortic constriction elicited a prompt
and sustained rise in mean carotid pressure that was significantly
greater in SAD than in intact rats. The increase in pressure was
associated with reflex bradycardia only in the intact rats, whereas the
heart rate of SAD rats did not change. Guanethidine treatment did not
affect the arterial pressure or heart rate responses to aortic
coarctation of intact rats but blunted the hypertensive response of SAD
rats to the same values exhibited by intact rats. Prazosin administered
10 min after the beginning of aortic coarctation reduced the
hypertensive response of SAD rats to the same level as that of intact
rats. In conclusion, the data obtained by means of the association of sinoaortic deafferentation with chronic sympathectomy with guanethidine or acute
1-adrenergic receptor
blockade with prazosin indicate that the greater hypertensive response
of SAD rats involves a lack of suppression of the sympathetic activity
in the maintenance of the rise in pressure elicited by aortic
coarctation.
sinoaortic denervation; sympathetic activity; reflex bradycardia; guanethidine; prazosin
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