Abstract

The role of brain mineralocorticoid receptor (MR) sites in the pathogenesis of mineralocorticoid hypertension was studied after an intracerebroventricular injection of the MR antagonist RU-28318. Male Wistar rats received subcutaneously implanted deoxycorticosterone acetate (DOCA) pellets and were maintained on 0.9% saline as drinking solution. Under these conditions hypertension developed in approximately 5 wk as assessed in conscious rats by means of the tail-cuff technique. During the development of this hypertension (after 3 wk of DOCA-salt treatment) a single intracerebroventricular injection of the specific MR antagonist RU-28318 reduced systolic blood pressure (SBP) as measured with the tail-cuff method. A decrease in SBP was observed 2-24 h after this intracerebroventricular injection, with the lowest SBP values occurring at 8 h. In these animals (3 wk after DOCA implantation) continuous direct blood pressure recording via chronic cannulation revealed, on the day of the intracerebroventricular injection of RU-28318, a slight increase in arterial pressure during the light phase, followed by a decrease during the dark phase. In the established hypertensive rats (5 wk after DOCA RU-28318 on the arterial pressure or heart rate was detectable. It is concluded that central MR blockade during the development of the DOCA-salt hypertension reduces blood pressure within 24 h assessed with 1) the indirect method at certain time points after exposure to warming and stress and 2) the direct method during the dark phase of the diurnal cycle.

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