Abstract
Endogenous nitric oxide is an important modulator of vascular smooth muscle tone. The role of nitric oxide in the vascular adaptation to systemic hypertension was examined by using N omega-monomethyl-L-arginine (L-NMMA; 110 micrograms/kg/min), a competitive inhibitor of the conversion of L-arginine to nitric oxide. L-NMMA or saline vehicle (9.6 microL/min) was infused i.v. into several rat models of acute and chronic systemic hypertension. The response to L-NMMA was compared either in uninephrectomized Sprague-Dawley rats treated with deoxycorticosterone on either a high- or low-sodium diet or in untreated uninephrectomized rats on normal chow. Hypertensive deoxycorticosterone rats had a significantly greater pressor response to L-NMMA (139 +/- 2 to 169 +/- 3 mm Hg; N = 9) than did normotensive uninephrectomized rats (112 +/- 4 to 129 +/- 3 mm Hg; N = 7) or deoxycortisterone treated rats on a low-sodium diet (108 +/- 2 to 121 +/- 3 mm Hg; N = 9). By contrast, hypertension induced by the vasoconstrictor angiotensin II did not have an enhanced response (134 +/- 3 to 154 +/- 4 mm Hg; N = 7) nor did spontaneously hypertensive rats (164 +/- 4 to 175 +/- 4 mm Hg; N = 6). This dose of L-NMMA had minimal effects on renal hemodynamics in the normotensive and hypertensive animals, except for those receiving angiotensin II where it led to substantial reductions of inulin and para-aminohippurate clearance. In conclusion, these data point to a role for nitric oxide in the vascular adaptation to volume-mediated hypertension, an effect that was not observed in vasoconstrictor-induced hypertension.
- Copyright © 1991 by American Society of Nephrology