1980
DOI: 10.1042/cs059211s
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Pre- and Post-Junctional Adrenergic Mechanisms and Hypertension

Abstract: 1. The ability of the blood vessel wall to synthesize noradrenaline is augmented at the early stages of genetic hypertension in animals. It usually is normal, or reduced in chronic hypertension. 2. The exocytotic release of noradrenaline is greater than normal, in the early stages of a number of experimental models of hypertension. 3. Postjunctional receptors for noradrenaline are not uniform throughout the vascular tree. Their sensitivity changes during the development of high blood pressure. 4. In chronic hy… Show more

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Cited by 37 publications
(13 citation statements)
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“…15 Previous reports on neuronal uptake, obtained in in vitro or ex vivo preparations, have found a diversified pattern of activity in the different tissues and phases of hypertension development in the SHR model. Neuronal uptake has been found to be normal in the cardiac and vascular tissues 24 and increased in the skeletal muscle and the kidney 5 of young SHR, but it is reduced in the heart 10 and increased in the resistance arteries 25 in hypertensive SHR. Furthermore, it has been reported that aging progressively reduces neuronal uptake of NE, 24,26 suggesting that in older SHR the contribution of the reduced reuptake in the maintenance of greater interstitial NE levels may become more important.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…15 Previous reports on neuronal uptake, obtained in in vitro or ex vivo preparations, have found a diversified pattern of activity in the different tissues and phases of hypertension development in the SHR model. Neuronal uptake has been found to be normal in the cardiac and vascular tissues 24 and increased in the skeletal muscle and the kidney 5 of young SHR, but it is reduced in the heart 10 and increased in the resistance arteries 25 in hypertensive SHR. Furthermore, it has been reported that aging progressively reduces neuronal uptake of NE, 24,26 suggesting that in older SHR the contribution of the reduced reuptake in the maintenance of greater interstitial NE levels may become more important.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Neuronal uptake has been found to be normal in the cardiac and vascular tissues 24 and increased in the skeletal muscle and the kidney 5 of young SHR, but it is reduced in the heart 10 and increased in the resistance arteries 25 in hypertensive SHR. Furthermore, it has been reported that aging progressively reduces neuronal uptake of NE, 24,26 suggesting that in older SHR the contribution of the reduced reuptake in the maintenance of greater interstitial NE levels may become more important. In human hypertension, a recent report showed an impairment of total and cardiac NE neuronal reuptake, 27 suggesting a functional reduction in NE presynaptic transporter activity linked to a possible gene mutation.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Such changes also increase metabolic activity and provide an early signal for vascular smooth muscle hypertrophy that, when combined with Abnormal neurogenic influences from altered tone of the putative pressor center could cause changes in vascular smooth muscle sensitivity. These neurogenic influences could stem from alterations in norepinephrine release and uptake 19 or changes in membrane potential of vascular smooth muscle. 20 The vascular smooth muscle of the spontaneously hypertensive rat has been shown to have a less negative resting membrane potential, a reduced K + equilibrium potential, and an enhanced electrogenic component to the resting membrane potential.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It has been suggested that, since the release of norepinephrine by peripheral nerve endings of the vascular wall is greater than normal in the young SHR, this enhancement of the exocytotic process may be one of the factors causing hypertension; 1 "* 1 •• " this would be of particular importance in view of the increased sympathetic traffic to the cardiovascular periphery which has been described also at the early stage of the disease. 6 ' 18 ' ' a ' v If it is assumed that the experiments on the Tyrode perfused kidneys of adult SHR reflect the behavior of the adrenergic neurotransmission in the intact animal, the present study implies that, if the release of norepinephrine in the blood vessel wall plays a role in maintaining the increased peripheral resistance in the chronic stage of the hypertensive process, this can only be attributed either to such central increases in sympathetic traffic, or to the presence of locally produced or circulating facilitators of the exocytotic release of norepinephrine.'' "…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%