Vasorelaxant effect of C16-PAF and C18-PAF on renal blood flow and systemic blood pressure in the anesthetized rat.
The renal vasoactive and systemic hypotensive effects of platelet activating factor (C16:0-PAF and C18:1-PAF) were examined in anesthetized male Wistar rats. Bolus injections of C16-PAF (0.5-25 ng/kg) and C18-PAF (2.5-200 ng/kg) into the arterial circulation of the kidney produced increases in renal blood flow (6-15%) before causing dose-dependent systemic hypotension (2-64 mmHg). The dose-response curves for renal blood flow and systemic blood pressure generated by intrarenal C18-PAF administration were approximately 7 fold to the right of the dose-response curves generated by C16-DPAF. Intrarenal injections of vehicle or the biologically inactive enantiomer C16-DPAF (25-200 ng/kg) did not affect renal blood flow or systemic blood pressure. These results suggest that C16:0-PAF is a more potent renal vasodilator and hypotensive lipid than C18:1-PAF.[1]References
- Vasorelaxant effect of C16-PAF and C18-PAF on renal blood flow and systemic blood pressure in the anesthetized rat. Handa, R.K., Strandhoy, J.W., Buckalew, V.M. Life Sci. (1991) [Pubmed]
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