Abstract

Hypertension in spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR) has been permanently abolished by aggressive treatment regimens targeted against the sympathetic nervous system and adrenal medulla, initiated during the pre-weaning period (guanethidine and nerve growth factor antiserum combined with either adrenal demedullation or prazosin treatment). To investigate the components of the sympatho-adrenal system involved, we treated pre-weaning SHR with the combined α 1- and β-adrenoceptor antagonist carvedilol (60 mg/kg/day s.c.; postnatal days 1–21). Carvedilol treatment significantly blocked adrenoceptors during the treatment period, delayed development (eye opening), reduced growth, and reduced arterial pressure and heart rate. However, there was only modest attenuation of the subsequent development of hypertension at 10 weeks of age (mean arterial pressure 129.5±1.8 versus 136.1±1.6 mm Hg in vehicle-treated littermates; P<0.05). Thus pre-weaning carvedilol treatment slightly but significantly attenuated the development of SHR hypertension at 10 weeks, suggesting that the profound antihypertensive effects of pre-weaning sympatho-adrenal ablation are attributable to factors other than α 1- and β-adrenoceptor-mediated effects of catecholamines during this period.

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