Abstract

The present study has examined the vascular responses to infusion of norepinephrine (NE) and parathyroid hormone (PTH 1-34) in animals subjected for a six month period to one of four dietary regimens. Some animals received normal calcium chow (1.0% Ca by weight) and drank water (subgroup A), others consumed the same chow, but water was replaced by 0.5% saline (subgroup B), a third group consumed chow which had 2.0% Ca content and also drank 0.5% saline (subgroup C) and a fourth group consumed the 2.0% Ca chow, but drank water (subgroup D). No differences were found in the pressor response to NE across subgroup A, B, and C, while pressor response to NE in subgroup D was markedly reduced. Depressor responses to PTH were not significantly different across any of the four groups. The ability of changes in calcium homeostasis to affect blood pressure responses to NE and PTH were evaluated in animals consuming reduced dietary calcium (0.1%) for two and four weeks and compared with animals on normal calcium intake (1.0%). This dietary treatment resulted in only mild effects on calcium balance; after four weeks no significant difference in plasma total calcium concentration was observed, but plasma PTH levels were increased in animals on the low Ca diet. No effects on the blood pressure response to NE or PTH infusion were observed after 2 weeks of dietary treatment. At four weeks, NE responses remained unchanged, while responses to PTH were blunted in animals on 0.1% Ca chow.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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