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Influence of Dietary Sodium on Blood Pressure in Baroreceptor-Denervated Rats
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1985
Year
Animal PhysiologyHypertensionSalt SensitivityPhysiological ResearchBlood PressureNeurophysiologyAntihypertensive TherapySympathetic Nervous SystemPhysiologyWky RatsNeuroscienceNervous SystemMedicineSocial SciencesAnesthesiologyEndocrine Hypertension
One possible explanation for the salt sensitivity of blood pressure (BP) in certain hypertensive individuals is that neural mechanisms which normally counteract the pressor effect of a high dietary sodium intake are defective. We have tested this possibility in normotensive Wistar-Kyoto rats (WKY) by surgically ablating the arterial baroreflex mechanism. This manoeuvre, by itself, conferred substantial salt-sensitivity on the WKY rats whose BP is normally relatively insensitive to dietary sodium intake. The treated rats responded to a high sodium diet with a significant rise in systolic BP which was reversed by substituting a low sodium diet. Thus, impaired baroreflex function which has been observed in essential hypertension and in hypertensive animals, may be responsible for the hypertensive effect of sodium.