Abstract

Decrease in systemic blood pressure, duration of pressure decrease, and change in the activity of the renin or the sympathetic nervous system may represent mechanisms involved in resetting the renal blood flow (RBF) autoregulation found in hypertensive rats. Autoregulation of RBF, plasma renin concentration (PRC), and the time needed for resetting to take place were studied in the nonclipped kidney before and after removal of the clipped kidney of two- kidney, one-clip (2K1C) hypertensive rats and before and after mechanical reduction of the renal arterial pressure (RAP) for 10 min in the spontaneously hypertensive rat (SHR) and in the nonclipped kidney of 2K1C hypertensive rats with and without renal denervation. Mean arterial pressure (MAP) fell from 147 to 107 mmHg 30 min after removal of the clipped kidney, and the lower pressure limit of RBF autoregulation decreased from 113 to 90 mmHg (P < 0.01); PRC fell. Mechanical reductions of RAP from 161 to 120 mmHg in the nonclipped kidney for 10 min did not change RBF, but at 120 mmHg, the lower pressure limit of RBF autoregulation was reduced from 115 mmHg before pressure reduction to 96 mmHg afterwards (P < 0.02). In SHR, similar pressure reduction for 10 min decreased the lower pressure limit of RBF autoregulation from 106 to 86 mmHg (P < 0.01). PRC was unchanged in both models, and denervation did not change RBF autoregulation. When RAP was reduced below the lower pressure limit of RBF autoregulation, RBF decreased approximately 20%; the lower pressure limit of RBF autoregulation remained unchanged. In normotensive Wistar-Kyoto rats, pressure reduction did not change the range of RBF autoregulation. These results indicate that acute normalization of the pressure range of RBF autoregulation in hypertensive rats is dependent on the degree of pressure reduction of RAP, whereas renal innervation and PRC do not play a major role. We propose that the mechanism of resetting is due to afterstretch of noncontractile elements of the vessel wall or is caused by pure myogenic mechanisms. An effect of intrarenal angiotensin cannot be excluded.

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