High NaCl diet enhances arterial baroreceptor reflex in NaCl-sensitive spontaneously hypertensive rats

Academic Article

Abstract

  • Previous studies from our laboratory have shown that arterial baroreceptor reflex control of lumbar sympathetic nerve activity is blunted in the NaCl-sensitive spontaneously hypertensive rat (SHR-S) compared with either the NaCl-resistant spontaneously hypertensive rat (SHR-R) or the normotensive Wistar-Kyoto (WKY) rat. In the current study, the effect of dietary NaCl supplementation on arterial baroreceptor reflex control of lumbar sympathetic nerve activity and heart rate was assessed in SHR-S and control SHR-R and WKY rats. Male SHR-S, SHR-R, and WKY rats were fed diets containing either 1% or 8% NaCl beginning at 7 weeks of age and were studied at age 9-10 weeks. Arterial baroreceptor reflex-mediated changes in lumbar sympathetic nerve activity and heart rate were recorded in conscious, unrestrained rats during phenylephrine-induced (15-40 μg/kg/min) and nitroprusside-induced (15-300 μg/kg/min) changes in mean arterial pressure. SHR-S maintained on a 1% NaCl diet had blunted baroreceptor reflex control of lumbar sympathetic nerve activity during acute increases in MAP compared with SHR-R and WKY rats (p<0.05). After ingestion of the 8% NaCl diet, this blunting was absent, indicating enhancement of baroreceptor reflex control of lumbar sympathetic nerve activity. SHR-S maintained on a 1% NaCl diet also had blunted arterial baroreceptor control of lumbar sympathetic nerve activity during nitroprusside-induced decreases in mean arterial pressure compared with WKY rats, but this was not significantly altered during ingestion of the 8% NaCl diet. Arterial baroreceptor reflex-mediated control of heart rate during acute increases or decreases in MAP was blunted in SHR-S and SHR-R maintained on either diet compared with WKY rats (p<0.05). The NaCl-induced augmentation of arterial baroreceptor reflex control of lumbar sympathetic nerve activity in SHR-S would serve to buffer the NaCl-induced increase in mean arterial pressure. Further study is needed to elucidate its mechanism.
  • Published In

  • Hypertension  Journal
  • Digital Object Identifier (doi)

    Author List

  • Calhoun DA; Wyss JM; Oparil S
  • Start Page

  • 363
  • End Page

  • 368
  • Volume

  • 17
  • Issue

  • 3