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Renal Urinary Kallikrein in Normotensive and Hypertensive Rats during Enhanced Excretion of Water and Electrolytes
16
Citations
5
References
1976
Year
HypertensionRenal PathologyUrinary KallikreinRenal KallikreinRenal FunctionRenal PharmacologyHypertensive RatsSodium HomeostasisRenal PathophysiologyEnhanced ExcretionPharmacologyPotassium HomeostasisUrologyPhysiologyRenal Urinary KallikreinKallikrein ExcretionMetabolismMedicineNephrologyKidney Research
1. Urinary kallikrein excreted by normal rats is significantly increased (P less than 0-001) 2 h after: (a) water loading, (b) water loading plus frusemide, 0-27 mmol (10 mg) per rat, (c) salt loading. In water-loaded rats, 5 i.u. of renin strikingly reduced kallikrein excretion (P less than 0-01) but considerably increased sodium excretion (P less than 0-001). 2. Renal kallikrein, measured by its kininogenase activity within 2 h of water loading, was significantly increased (P less than 0-05); after water loading and frusemide it was 40% decreased (P less than 0-001) and after salt loading it was reduced by approximately 50% (P less than 0-02). Renin did not change renal kallikrein. 3. Severely hypertensive (one-kidney) rats (blood pressure greater than 150 mmHg) showed no increase of urinary kallikrein after water loading, although there was a marked natriuresis, in moderately hypertensive rats (blood pressure less than 150 mmHg) urinary kallikrein was only one-third of that observed in control normotensive rats, after an equal degree of water loading.
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