AI Article Synopsis

  • Hypertension in postmenopausal women is harder to control compared to men, and this study explores how renal denervation can impact blood pressure in old female SHR models.
  • Renal denervation led to a significant decrease in mean arterial pressure (MAP), but even with treatment using losartan (an AT1 receptor antagonist), the rats remained hypertensive.
  • The findings indicate that the renal sympathetic nervous system and the renin-angiotensin system influence blood pressure independently, suggesting that other mechanisms might also contribute to hypertension in postmenopausal females.

Article Abstract

Hypertension in postmenopausal women is less well controlled than in age-matched men. The aging female SHR is a model of postmenopausal hypertension that is mediated in part by activation of the renin-angiotensin system (RAS) and by the renal sympathetic nervous system. In this study, the hypothesis was tested that renal denervation would lower the blood pressure in old female SHR and would attenuate the antihypertensive effects of AT1 receptor antagonism. Retired breeder female SHR were subjected to right uninephrectomy (UNX) and left renal denervation (RD) or UNX and sham, and 2 weeks later, baseline mean arterial pressure (MAP; radiotelemetry) was measured for 4 days, and then rats were treated with angiotensin (AT1) receptor antagonist, losartan (40 mg/kg/day po) for 6 days. Renal denervation reduced MAP in old females compared to sham (172 ± 6 vs. 193 ± 6 mm Hg; P < 0.05). Losartan reduced MAP in both sham and RD rats similarly (numerically and by percentage) (142 ± 10 vs. 161 ± 6 mm Hg; P < 0.05 vs. RD, P < 0.05 vs. baseline). However, female SHR rats remained significantly hypertensive despite both pharmacological intervention and RD. The data suggest that both the renal sympathetic nervous system and the RAS have independent effects to control the blood pressure in old female SHR. Since the denervated rats treated with losartan remained hypertensive, the data also suggest that other mechanisms than the RAS and renal sympathetic nervous system contribute to the hypertension in old female SHR. The data also suggest that multiple mechanisms may mediate the elevated blood pressure in postmenopausal women.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4760383PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.14814/phy2.12669DOI Listing

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