Abstract

The adrenocortical tissue which regenerates after adrenal enucleation, and contralateral uninephrectomy and adrenalectomy, resembles histologically zona fasciculata tissue which normally synthesises glucocorticoids. However, increases in blood pressure after enucleation (adrenal regeneration hypertension-ARH] were preceded by a rise in exchangeable body sodium similar to that found with mineralocorticoid-induced hypertension (e.g. DOC/salt rat model). Glucocorticoid involvement in ARH rats was tested, firstly by infusing dexamethasone into control and ARH rats to see whether ACTH suppression would lower blood pressure by reducing adrenocortical activity and, secondly, by infusing dexamethasone into rats with intact adrenals to see whether conditions for ARH (i.e. uninephrectomy and/or saline consumption) pre-disposed rats to the hypertensinogenic properties of glucocorticoids. Low-dose dexamethasone infusions (10 micrograms/day for 5 days) in ARH rats did not affect blood pressure but in control animals caused a significant (P less than 0.01) increase from 128 +/- 3 to 151 +/- 5 mmHg. Corticosterone, 18-hydroxycorticosterone and deoxycorticosterone plasma concentrations were suppressed in both groups by dexamethasone treatment; plasma renin concentrations were lower in ARH rats than in controls. Uninephrectomy or 1% NaCl as drinking fluid did not affect the blood pressure rise induced by sc infusion of 10 micrograms dexamethasone/day for 14 days in rats with intact adrenals. The temporal relationship between blood pressure changes and exchangeable body sodium in ARH rats resembles that in mineralocorticoid-induced hypertension. Glucocorticoid, unlike mineralocorticoid, induced hypertension is not affected by a reduction in renal mass or increased sodium intake.

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