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
CITATION STYLE
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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