Effects of sodium chloride on pregnant sheep with reduced uteroplacental perfusion pressure.
- 1 January 1986
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Hypertension
- Vol. 8 (1) , 62-65
- https://doi.org/10.1161/01.hyp.8.1.62
Abstract
This study investigated the effects of NaCl supplementation (5 mEq/kg/day) on the arterial pressure of pregnant and nonpregnant sheep with and without reduction of uteroplacental perfusion pressure. In pregnant sheep receiving NaCl supplementation during the third trimester, reduction of aortic pressure caudal to the kidneys to 65% of the upstream pressure (occlusion) caused a progressive increase in mean arterial pressure from 89 +/- 3 to 110 +/- 3 mm Hg over 2 weeks. Occlusion was accompanied by a decrease in urine flow. Six of seven sheep died or were killed because of severe respiratory distress. No abnormalities were detected in nonpregnant sheep or pregnant sheep receiving NaCl supplementation only. Pregnant sheep that were occluded but received no supplementary NaCl did not become hypertensive but aborted about 2 weeks after occlusion. These results indicate that reduction of uteroplacental perfusion pressure causes hypertension in NaCl-supplemented pregnant sheep but not in sheep receiving a normal, low sodium diet.This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
- Salt-Sensitive Hypertension: Contribution of ChlorideScience, 1984
- Dietary Chloride as a Determinant of "Sodium-Dependent" HypertensionScience, 1983
- Progressive hypertension in dogs by avoidance conditioning and saline infusion.Hypertension, 1983
- Simplified Technique to Produce Toxemia in the Rat: Considerations on Cause of ToxemiaClinical and Experimental Hypertension. Part B: Hypertension in Pregnancy, 1982
- Uteroplacental Blood Flow in Pre-Eclampsia Measurements with Indium-113M and a Computer-Linked Gamma CameraClinical and Experimental Hypertension. Part B: Hypertension in Pregnancy, 1982
- Sodium intake alters the effects of norepinephrine on blood pressure.Hypertension, 1981
- LOW SODIUM/HIGH POTASSIUM DIET FOR PREVENTION OF HYPERTENSION: PROBABLE MECHANISMS OF ACTIONThe Lancet, 1981
- A Study of Angiotensin II Pressor Response throughout Primigravid PregnancyJournal of Clinical Investigation, 1973
- Angiotensin II Vascular Receptors: Their Avidity in Relationship to Sodium Balance, the Autonomic Nervous System, and HypertensionJournal of Clinical Investigation, 1972
- Toxemia of pregnancy in sheep: a clinical, physiological, and pathological studyJournal of Clinical Investigation, 1969