Abstract
SUMMARY 1. The effect of surgical denervation of the adrenal gland on ACTH-induced hypertension in the sheep has been examined. ACTH (80 iu/day) was administered for 5 days to eight sheep before and after bilateral surgical denervation of the adrenal. 2. In intact sheep, ACTH-induced hypertension is associated with a significant increase in cardiac output and heart rate. Adrenal denervation obtained by sectioning of the lumbar sympathetic and splanchnic nerves supplying the adrenal gland did not alter the magnitude or time course of the hypertension, or the increase in heart rate. 3. Adrenal denervation did not affect the increase in plasma sodium, the fall in plasma potassium, the initial urinary sodium retention, the increase in water turnover or the changes in blood corticosteroids which are seen during ACTH administration to intact sheep. However, in these adrenally denervated sheep ACTH treatment did not significantly change cardiac output. 4. This study suggests an important role for a factor or factors from the adrenal cortex in causing ACTH-induced hypertension.
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