Abstract

Hydrostatic pressure and flow in renal proximal tubules oscillate at 30-40 mHz in normotensive rats anesthetized with halothane. The oscillations originate in tubuloglomerular feedback, a mechanism that provides local blood flow regulation. Instead of oscillations, spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR) have aperiodic tubular pressure fluctuations; the pattern is suggestive of deterministic chaos. Normal rats made hypertensive by clipping one renal artery had similar aperiodic tubular pressure fluctuations in the unclipped kidney, and the fraction of rats with irregular fluctuations increased with time after the application of the renal artery clip. Statistical measures of deterministic chaos were applied to tubular pressure data. The correlation dimension, a measure of the dimension of the phase space attractor generating the time series, indicated the presence of a low-dimension strange attractor, and the largest Lyapunov exponent, a measure of the rate of divergence in phase space, was positive, indicating sensitivity to initial conditions. These time series therefore satisfy two criteria of deterministic chaos. The measures were the same in SHR as in rats with renovascular hypertension. Since two different models of hypertension displayed similar dynamics, we suggest that chaotic behavior is a common feature of renal vascular control in the natural history of the disease.

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