Abstract

Using plasma catecholamine (CA) levels as an index of the sympathoadrenal activity, the effects of chronic and acute beta-blockade on the blood pressure and sympathetic activity were evaluated in deoxycorticosterone acetate (DOCA) - salt hypertensive (HT) rats. The acute administration of one beta-blocker (sotalol, 5 mg/kg) to intact of vagotomized anesthetized HT animals induced a significant decrease in plasma norepinephrine (NE) concentrations and mean arterial pressure (MAP). The amplitude of the decrease of the MAP or NE levels were linearly correlated with the basal NE levels, suggesting that sotalol reduced the blood pressure and sympathetic NE release more efficiently in rats with increased sympathetic activity. Similarly, chronic infusion of sotalol (1.5 mg X day-1 X rat-1) through an osmotic pump for 12 days in DOCA-salt HT rats significantly reduced NE and epinephrine (E) plasma levels compared with those observed in untreated DOCA-salt HT rats. Moreover, the chronic treatment with sotalol significantly reduced the plasma E elevation induced by bilateral carotid occlusion (CO) in vagotomized normotensive (NT) and HT rats. It therefore appears that acute administration of sotalol to HT rats causes a significant reduction in the sympathetic activity which is associated to a decrease in MAP. Although chronic sotalol treatment causes a significant reduction in the sympathoadrenal basal activity and in the adrenal reactivity, this treatment did not prevent the development of DOCA-salt hypertension.

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