Abstract

We contrasted the renal effects of vasopressin in Brattleboro rats with and without pretreatment with aprotinin (20,000 KIU kg-1). In both treatment groups, vasopressin injected at 3 mU kg-1 sec caused in conscious rats elevation of urine osmolality and reduction of urine flow and urinary excretion of total solutes. However, these effects of vasopressin were significantly greater in aprotinin pretreated rats than in rats without aprotinin treatment. In ketamine-pentobarbital-anesthetized rats without aprotinin pretreatment, vasopressin infused at 2 mU kg-1 hr-1 elevated urinary kinin excretion but did not affect urine flow rate or osmolality; in contrast, in aprotinin-pretreated rats, the same dose of vasopressin did not increase urinary kinins but caused elevation of urinary osmolality and reduction of urine flow, solute excretion, and glomerular filtration rate. Aprotinin pretreatment in anesthetized rats also blunted the rise in kinin excretion elicited by vasopressin at a higher dosage, 5 mU kg-1 hr-1, but did not potentiate the vasopressin-induced antidiuresis. We conclude that aprotinin facilitates the expression of the antidiuretic effect of vasopressin at a low, but not at a high dosage. This effect of aprotinin may be a consequence of: renal kallikrein inhibition which prevents augmentation of renal kinins in response to increased vasopressin levels, or other unrecognized properties of aprotinin.

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