Recovery of high blood pressure after chronic lesions of the commissural NTS in SHR

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Data

2003-10-01

Autores

Sato, Monica Akemi
Schoorlemmer, Gerhardus Hermanus Maria
Menani, José Vanderlei [UNESP]
Lopes, Oswaldo Ubríaco
Colombari, Eduardo [UNESP]

Título da Revista

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Editor

Lippincott Williams & Wilkins

Resumo

Acute electrolytic lesions of the commissural nucleus of the solitary tract (commNTS) reduce blood pressure (BP) in SHR but not in normotensive Wistar-Kyoto and Wistar rats and abolish the pressor response to intravenous injection of potassium cyanide. We investigated the chronic effect of commNTS lesions on mean arterial pressure (MAP), and on baroreceptor and chemoreceptor reflex responses in SHR. The contribution of the sympathetic nervous system and the hormones vasopressin and angiotensin II to maintenance of BP in lesioned SHR was also investigated. MAP fell to normotensive levels the day after lesioning the commNTS but returned to the hypertensive level 9 days later. The reflex tachycardia evoked by sodium nitroprusside remained attenuated for 10 days after commNTS lesions but became enhanced 30 days after commNTS lesions. The pressor component of the chemoreflex elicited by potassium cyanide remained blocked for 30 days after lesions. Vasopressin antagonist or ACE blocker did not change MAP in sham or commNTS-lesioned SHR. Ganglionic blockade with hexamethonium elicited similar reductions in MAP in sham and commNTS-lesioned SHR. Results demonstrated that commNTS lesions in SHR produce a transient fall in BP and a long-lasting inhibition of the pressor response of the chemoreflex. Therefore, the blockade of the pressor response to peripheral chemoreflex activation is not sufficient to chronically reduce MAP in SHR. In the chronic absence of the commNTS, other subnuclei of the NTS or other brain stem nuclei may reorganize to replace the function of commNTS neurons, restoring sympathetic activity and high BP in SHR.

Descrição

Palavras-chave

baroreceptors, chemoreceptors, blood pressure, rats, spontaneously hypertensive

Como citar

Hypertension. Philadelphia: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, v. 42, n. 4, p. 713-718, 2003.