Evaluation Studies
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Depressive Effects of Chronic Intermittent Hypobaric Hypoxia on Renal Vascular Hypertension through Enhancing Baroreflex.

Baroreflex function plays a critical role in the maintenance of cardiovascular homeostasis and is impaired in different types of hypertension in both human and animals. Chronic intermittent hypobaric hypoxia (CIHH) facilitates baroreflex in anesthetized rats. The aim of present study was to investigate the effect of CIHH on arterial blood pressure (ABP) and baroreflex function in renal vascular hypertension (RVH) rats. Adult male Sprague-Dawley rats were randomly divided into four groups: Sham-operated (SHAM), RVH, CIHH treatment (CIHH), and RVH plus CIHH (RVH+CIHH) groups. RVH was induced by 2-kidney-1-clip method. CIHH rats experienced 28-day (6 h per day) hypobaric hypoxia simulating 5,000 m altitude in hypobaric chamber. Renal sympathetic nerve activity (RSNA), ABP and heart rate (HR) were recorded. Baroreflex was elicited by intravenous infusion of phenylephrine (PE, 25 μg/kg) and sodium nitroprusside (SNP, 10 μg/KG), respectively. Baroreflex curves were plotted by using RSNA or HR v.s. mean arterial pressure (MAP). The systolic ABP measured by tail-cuff method was significantly higher in RVH rats compared with SHAM rats. Furthermore, RSNA-MAP baroreflex curves were shifted to the right and upward with a decrease in baroreflex gain (Gmax) in RVH rats. CIHH treatment significantly decreased systolic ABP in RVH rats to the level in SHAM rats and shifted RSNA-MAP baroreflex curves to the left and downward with a normalized Gmax. These data suggest that CIHH treatment produces an anti-hypertensive effect in RVH rats, likely due to facilitating baroreflex function. Thus, CIHH represents a novel potential therapeutics to treat hypertension.

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