Abstract

The aim of this study was to search for the possible mechanisms involved in the antihypertensive effect of neonatal thymectomy that we previously observed in Lyon hypertensive (LH) rats. To that end, we studied in LH and normotensive control (LN) rats the consequences of neonatal thymectomy on vascular reactivity, renal structure, and pressure-natriuresis. The increase in pressor responses to angiotensin I and phenylephrine noted in LH rats as compared to LN animals was abolished by neonatal thymectomy. Histological study showed that kidneys from LH rats exhibited arterial wall hypertrophy, segmental hyalinization of the glomeruli, and were infiltrated by mononuclear cells. All these features of kidney injury were reduced in neonatally thymectomized LH rats. Lastly, the responses of isolated perfused kidneys from LH rats to stepwise reductions in renal perfusion pressure differed from those of LN rats by decreased renal perfusion flow and natriuresis. Neonatal thymectomy tended to improve sodium excretion in parallel with a slight decrease in renal vascular resistances. It is concluded that the normalization of vascular responsiveness to vasoconstrictor factors, the alleviation of renal lesions and, to a lesser extent, the moderate improvement of pressure natriuresis may account, at least in part, for the antihypertensive effect of neonatal thymectomy in LH rats.

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