Abstract

Neurogenic pulmonary edema (NPE), which is induced by acute spinal cord compression (SCC) under the mild (1.5 %) isoflurane anesthesia, is highly dependent on baroreflex-mediated bradycardia because a deeper (3 %) isoflurane anesthesia or atropine pretreatment completely abolished bradycardia occurrence and NPE development in rats subjected to SCC. The aim of the present study was to evaluate whether hypertension-associated impairment of baroreflex sensitivity might exert some protection against NPE development in hypertensive animals. We therefore studied SCC-induced NPE development in two forms of experimental hypertension - spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR) and salt hypertensive Dahl rats, which were reported to have reduced baroreflex sensitivity. SCC elicited NPE in both hypertensive models irrespective of their baroreflex sensitivity. It is evident that a moderate impairment of baroreflex sensitivity, which was demonstrated in salt hypertensive Dahl rats, does not exert sufficient protective effects against NPE development.

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