Studies were designed to determine the effects of increases of renal perfusion pressure on the production of hydrogen peroxide (H 2O 2) and NO 2-+NO 3- within the renal outer medulla. Sprague-Dawley rats were studied with either the renal capsule intact or removed to ascertain the contribution of changes of medullary blood flow and renal interstitial hydrostatic pressure on H 2O 2 and NO 2-+NO 3- production. Responses to three 30-minute step changes of renal perfusion pressure (from ≈85 to ≈115 to ≈145 mm Hg) were studied using adjustable aortic occluders proximal and distal to the left renal artery. Medullary interstitial H 2O 2 determined by microdialysis increased at each level of renal perfusion pressure from 640 to 874 to 1593 nmol/L, as did H 2O 2 urinary excretion rates, and these responses were significantly attenuated by decapsulation. Medullary interstitial NO 2-+NO 3- increased from 9.2 to 13.8 to 16.1 μmol/L, with parallel changes in urine NO 2-+NO 3- but decapsulation did not significantly blunt these responses. Over the range of renal perfusion pressure, medullary blood flow (laser-Doppler flowmetry) rose ≈30% and renal interstitial hydrostatic pressure rose from 7.8 to 19.7 cm H 2O. Renal interstitial hydrostatic pressure and the natriuretic and diuretic responses were significantly attenuated with decapsulation, but medullary blood flow was not affected. The data indicate that pressure-induced increases of H 2O 2 emanated largely from increased tubular flow rates to the medullary thick-ascending limbs of Henle and NO largely from increased medullary blood flow to the vasa recta. The parallel pressure-induced increases of H 2O 2 and NO indicate a participation in shaping the "normal" pressure-natriuresis relationship and explain why an imbalance in either would affect the blood pressure salt sensitivity. © 2009 American Heart Association, Inc.
CITATION STYLE
Jin, C., Hu, C., Polichnowski, A., Mori, T., Skelton, M., Ito, S., & Cowley, A. W. (2009). Effects of renal perfusion pressure on renal medullary hydrogen peroxide and nitric oxide production. Hypertension, 53(6), 1048–1053. https://doi.org/10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.109.128827
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