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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 

Heart rate reflex responses during gestation in normotensive and spontaneously hypertensive rats following angiotensin II and vasopressin.

Gestation in the human and in rats is accompanied by a decrease in blood pressure and a reduction of the pressor response to vasoconstrictor agents. In humans, the decreased vascular reactivity to angiotensin II (AII) may occur simultaneously with a state of increased baroreceptor sensitivity. We have consequently evaluated the heart rate response to elevation of blood pressure following administration of either AII or arginine8-vasopressin ( AVP) in conscious unrestrained, nonpregnant, or term-pregnant normotensive rats (Sprague-Dawley, SDR; Wistar-Kyoto, WKR) and in spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR). The decrease in heart rate in response to increase in blood pressure by AII in nonpregnant animals was similar in SDR and SHR, but much greater in WKR. The heart rate response to increase in blood pressure by AVP was similar in all three strains of cycling rats. Gestation (20th day) did not change the heart rate response to increase in blood pressure by AII in normotensive animals, but increased slightly the reflex responses in SHR, as shown by a significant increase of the slope of the relationship of the decrement in heart rate versus the increment of blood pressure. The heart rate response to increase in blood pressure by AVP was greater during gestation in normotensive SDR and WKR, but not in SHR. These results show that the heart rate responses to an increase in blood pressure by vasoconstrictor peptides is dependent on the strain of animals used and suggest that the baroreceptor reflexes play a minor role in the blunted effect of vasconstrictor agens at the end of gestation in normotensive and spontaneously hypertensive rats.[1]

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