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Chronic renal artery insulin infusion increases mean arterial pressure in male Sprague-Dawley rats.

Hyperinsulinemia has been hypothesized to cause hypertension in obesity, type 2 diabetes, and metabolic syndrome through a renal mechanism. However, it has been challenging to isolate renal mechanisms in chronic experimental models due, in part, to technical difficulties. In this study, we tested the hypothesis that a renal mechanism underlies insulin hypertension. We developed a novel technique to permit continuous insulin infusion through the renal artery in conscious rats for 7 days. Mean arterial pressure increased by ~10 mmHg in rats that were infused intravenously (IV) with insulin and glucose. Renal artery doses were 20% of the intravenous doses and did not raise systemic insulin levels or cause differences in blood glucose. The increase in blood pressure was not different from the IV group. Mean arterial pressure did not change in vehicle-infused rats, and there were no differences in renal injury scoring due to the renal artery catheter. Glomerular filtration rate, plasma renin activity, and urinary sodium excretion did not differ between groups at baseline and did not change significantly with insulin infusion. Thus, by developing a novel approach for chronic, continuous renal artery insulin infusion, we provided new evidence that insulin causes hypertension in rats through actions initiated within the kidney.

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