L-arginine administration normalizes pressure natriuresis in hypertensive Dahl rats

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Abstract

A blunted pressure-natriuretic response characterizes hypertension in the Dahl salt-sensitive rat. Long-term L-arginine administration prevents hypertension in these animals. To determine if long-term L-arginine corrects the pressure-natriuretic response, we gave salt-sensitive rats on an 8% sodium diet L-arginine or vehicle daily for 3 weeks. Identically treated salt-resistant rats served as controls. After 3 weeks, acute pressure-natriuresis curves were determined. To control for hypertension-induced renal damage, we also examined pressure natriuresis in salt-sensitive rats after short-term L-arginine. Baseline mean arterial pressure was 158±3 mm Hg in vehicle-treated salt-sensitive rats and 127±3 mm Hg in chronically L-arginine-treated salt-sensitive rats. During alterations in perfusion pressure, renal blood flow was autoregulated in all groups. Glomerular filtration rate was autoregulated in salt-resistant rats and L-arginine-treated salt-sensitive rats but fell with decreasing pressure in vehicle-treated salt-sensitive rats. Sodium excretion was greater (P

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Patel, A., Layne, S., Watts, D., & Kirchner, K. A. (1993). L-arginine administration normalizes pressure natriuresis in hypertensive Dahl rats. Hypertension, 22(6), 863–869. https://doi.org/10.1161/01.hyp.22.6.863

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