Modulation of Blood Pressure in the Dahl SS/jr Rat by Embryo Transfer

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Abstract

Gestational hypertension and malnutrition are associated with hypertension and ischemic heart disease in the adult human. The impact of the gestational environment on the adult blood pressure in two well-characterized genetically homogeneous rat strains, the hypertensive SS/jr and normotensive SR/jr, was studied by cross-fostering within 6 hours of birth and by embryo transplantation with the recipient dam nursing the transplanted pups. Systolic blood pressure (BP) was measured by tail-cuff plethysmography twice a week after the age of 7 weeks. The lactational environment (cross-fostering) had no effect on blood pressure. Embryo transfer between like strains had no effect on the development of hypertension, nor did the BP of R transferred to S (RetS) differ from that of normal R or RetR. At 7 weeks of age, the BP of SetR was significantly lower than that of S or SetS (P

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Kubisch, H. M., Mathialagan, S., & Gomez-Sanchez, E. P. (1998). Modulation of Blood Pressure in the Dahl SS/jr Rat by Embryo Transfer. Hypertension, 31(1), 540–545. https://doi.org/10.1161/01.HYP.31.1.540

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