Abstract

This study was performed to assess the possible contribution of endogenous angiotensin II (AII) to the regulation of urinary kallikrein excretion. The AII antagonist saralasin or the saline vehicle was infused into the aorta above the renal arteries of pigs under halothane-O2/N2O anaesthesia. Systemic and renal functional parameters were followed for 140 min and during stimulation of the reninangiotensin system by haemorrhage. Urinary kallikrein excretion, determined as kininogenase activity, was increased immediately upon both initiation and termination of the 2 h saralasin infusion into pigs not subjected to haemorrhage. Renal cortical blood flow (RCBF) was maintained, in both saline and saralasin-treated animals at blood pressures as low as 70 mm Hg, while glomerular filtration rate was dissociated during saralasin infusion. As long as RCBF was maintained, urinary kallikrein excretion rate was elevated during the progressive hypotension in both saline and saralasin-treated animals. These findings confirm a close relationship between the maintenance of RCBF and increased activity of the kallikrein-kinin system whether or not AII is antagonized, and indicate that during haemorrhage the kallikrein-kinin system is stimulated by a mechanism not involving AII.

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