Abstract

The present study investigated the effects of chronic treatment with deoxycorticosterone-acetate (DOCA)-salt on cardiovascular responses to intravenous (i.v.) injection of the essential oil of Mentha x villosa (EOMV) in conscious rats. In both DOCA-salt-hypertensive and uninephrectomized control, conscious rats, i.v. bolus injections of EOMV (1 to 20 mg/kg body wt.) decreased mean aortic pressure (MAP) and heart rate (HR) in a dose-dependent manner. Treatment with DOCA-salt significantly enhanced EOMV-induced decreases in MAP, without affecting bradycardia. Likewise, both maximal percent and absolute decreases in MAP elicited by i.v. injection of the ganglion blocker, hexamethonium (30 mg/kg body wt.), were significantly greater in DOCA-salt-hypertensive than in control rats. In DOCA-salt-hypertensive rats, i.v. pretreatment with hexamethonium (30 mg/kg body wt.) reduced the bradycardia elicited by EOMV (1 to 20 mg/kg body wt.) without affecting the enhancement of EOMV-induced hypotension. These results show that i.v. treatment with EOMV decreases blood pressure in conscious DOCA-salt-hypertensive rats dose-dependently, and that this action is enhanced when compared with uninephrectomized controls. This enhancement could be related mainly to an increase in EOMV-induced vascular smooth muscle relaxation, rather than to enhanced sympathetic nervous system activity in this hypertensive model.

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