Prenatal and postnatal hydralazine treatment does not prevent renal vessel wall thickening in SHR despite the absence of hypertension.
- 1 September 1988
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Circulation Research
- Vol. 63 (3) , 534-542
- https://doi.org/10.1161/01.res.63.3.534
Abstract
Previous studies in our laboratory have shown that the renal blood vessels of 21-week-old Wistar-Kyoto spontaneously hypertensive rats exhibited thicker vascular walls than age matched Wistar-Kyoto normotensive rats. Morphometric analysis of the relaxed renovasculature revealed an increase in the cross-sectional area of the media, which in most cases was associated with an increase in the number of smooth muscle cell layers. To test if these structural changes occur in the absence of raised blood pressure, hydralazine was administered to spontaneously hypertensive rats and normotensive controls prior to and during pregnancy (100 ml/l drinking water), and to the newborn males up to 21 weeks of age (16.9 mg/kg/day by gavage until weaning followed by 100 mg/l in the drinking water). Treated animals were compared with untreated rats. Treatment prevented hypertension development in spontaneously hypertensive rats but did not alter the structural changes found in untreated animals with hypertension. At 21 weeks of age, hydralazine-treated spontaneously hypertensive rats had similar wall-to-lumen area ratios, medial cross-sectional areas and numbers of medial smooth muscle layers as untreated hypertensive rats while these parameters were greater in treated and untreated spontaneously hypertensive rats than in either treated or untreated normotensive controls. Withdrawal of hydralazine from 26-week-old spontaneously hypertensive rats that had been treated in utero and postnatally and had normal blood pressures throughout life resulted in the rapid onset of hypertension. Our results show that renal vascular wall thickening in spontaneously hypertensive rats occurs in the absence of high blood pressure and therefore is not a secondary effect of raised blood pressure.This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- Structural and reactivity alterations of the renal vasculature of spontaneously hypertensive rats prior to and during established hypertension.Circulation Research, 1988
- Effects of hydralazine on blood pressure, pressor mechanisms, and cardiac hypertrophy in two-kidney, one-clip hypertensive ratsCanadian Journal of Physiology and Pharmacology, 1986
- Hemodynamic effects of the arteriolar vasodilators hydralazine, dihydralazine and endralazine in the conscious spontaneously hypertensive ratEuropean Journal of Pharmacology, 1983
- Anatomical and Physiological Aspects of Cardiovascular Function in Wistar—Kyoto and Spontaneously Hypertensive Rats at BirthClinical Science, 1982
- Dimensional changes of cultured smooth muscle cells due to preparatory processes for transmission electron microscopyJournal of Microscopy, 1980
- Effect of chronic hypertension and sympathetic denervation on wall/lumen ratio of cerebral vessels.Hypertension, 1980
- Chronic antihypertensive drug treatment in young spontaneously hypertensive rats: effects on arterial blood pressure, cardiovascular reactivity and vascular designCardiovascular Research, 1978
- INFLUENCE OF ANTI‐HYPERTENSIVE DRUG TREATMENT ON VASCULAR REACTIVITY IN SPONTANEOUSLY HYPERTENSIVE RATSBritish Journal of Pharmacology, 1975
- The Effects of “Immunosympathectomy” on Blood Pressure and Vascular “Reactivity” in Normal and Spontaneously Hypertensive RatsActa Physiologica Scandinavica, 1972