Experiments were performed in anesthetized rats to examine whether infusion of dopamine is associated with a reduction in the tubuloglomerular feedback (TGF) response of stop-flow pressure (PSF) and early proximal flow rate (VEP) to increases of loop of Henle flow. The purpose of these studies was to test further the validity of the proposal that renal vasodilation is a nonspecific cause for diminished TGF responsiveness. When femoral arterial pressure was kept constant with a suprarenal aortic clamp, intravenous infusion of dopamine at rates of 4, 15, 35, and 75 micrograms.kg-1.min-1 induced a 10.9, 23.4, 31.3, and 30.1% decrease in renal vascular resistance. Maximum PSF and VEP responses were significantly reduced at all dose levels of dopamine, whereas V1/2, the flow rate required to produce the half-maximum response, was not altered. TGF blunting occurred within less than 10 min after starting the dopamine infusion. Peritubular infusion of dopamine reduced maximum PSF responses from 8.8 +/- 0.7 to 4.6 +/- 0.53 mmHg at 10(-4) M (P less than 0.01) and from 6.0 +/- 1.19 to 3.6 +/- 0.55 mmHg at 10(-3) M (P less than 0.05). The results are consistent with the notion that renal vasodilatation may modify TGF responses by preventing the full vasoconstrictor response to changes in luminal NaCl concentration.
This study examined the calcium dependency of contractions in arteries from rats made hypertensive by aortic coarctation and in rats with genetic hypertensive (stroke-prone spontaneously hypertensive rats). Mesenteric artery and aortic strips were suspended in tissue baths for isometric force recording and contractions to two drugs were characterized: 1) a phorbol ester, TPA (12-O-tetrade-canoylphorbol-13-acetate), and 2) the calcium channel agonist, Bay K 8644. Thoracic aortae and mesenteric arteries from hypertensive rats were more sensitive to the contractile properties of the protein kinase C activator TPA than comparable arteries from normotensive rats. In thoracic aortae from coarcted rats, the contractile activity of Bay K 8644 was potentiated compared to normotensive values. In the presence of 19.2 mmol/L KCl, responses to Bay K 8644 in thoracic aortae from normotensive rats were potentiated and did not differ from coarcted values. In contrast, contractions to Bay K 8644 and TPA in abdominal aortae obtained below the coarctation were not different from normotensive values. Upon exposure to 26.2 mmol/L KCl, contractions to Bay K 8644 in abdominal aortae were potentiated and those in aortae from coarcted rats did not differ from sham values. Contractile responses to both drugs were blocked by nifedipine and verapamil and responses were attenuated in calcium-free solution. We conclude that calcium channel function and its regulation by protein kinase C contribute to altered vascular reactivity in hypertension. Further, these abnormalities have a pressure dependency, because they did not occur in abdominal aortae from coarcted rats.
A case of asymptomatic urinary tract infection with Neisseria subflava biovar perflava in a 10-year-old male patient with congenital structural abnormalities of the urinary bladder is presented. The organism was recovered from three catheter urine specimens collected over a seven-month period. A brief review of the role of saprophytic Neisseria species in infectious processes is presented and the likely source of this unusual urinary tract isolate is discussed.
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