Hyper-responsiveness of adrenal sympathetic nerve activity in spontaneously hypertensive rats to ganglionic blockade, mental stress and neuronglucopenia
Wg. Zhang et P. Thoren, Hyper-responsiveness of adrenal sympathetic nerve activity in spontaneously hypertensive rats to ganglionic blockade, mental stress and neuronglucopenia, PFLUG ARCH, 437(1), 1998, pp. 56-60
Previous investigations indicate that the spontaneously hypertensive rat (S
HR) has elevated sympathetic tone at rest. The present study aimed to deter
mine whether SHR has exaggerated sympatho-adrenal activation in response to
various sympathetic stimuli. The mean blood pressure (MBP), heart rate (HR
) and preganglionic adrenal sympathetic nerve activity (SNA) were recorded
from conscious, unrestrained SHR and from its normotensive control, the Wis
tar-Kyoto rat (WKY) (n=7, respectively). Ganglionic blockade (trimethaphan,
5 mg/kg) reduced MBP identically in both groups of rats. It did not change
HR in SHR, but increased HR significantly in WKY (P<0.05). The adrenal SNA
increased in both groups, but the magnitude of the increase was more than
threefold greater in SHR (P<0.05). Mental stress caused by air-jet induced
significantly greater tachycardia (threefold) and sympatho-adrenal activati
on (tenfold) in SHR than in WKY rats. In SHR the inhibition of glycolysis (
2-deoxy-D-glucose, 500 mg/kg) also produced a profound activation of adrena
l SNA (sevenfold) and the increased adrenal SNA. was not paralleled by an i
ncreased KR. We conclude that a variety of sympathetic stimuli, including g
anglionic blockade, mental stress and neuronglucopenia, cause exaggerated a
ctivation of preganglionic adrenal SNA in SHR compared with WKY, indicating
that adrenal SNA in SHR is hyper-responsive.