Abstract
The role of the renal nerves in the electrolyte excretion of rats fed or fasted overnight was determined in conscious rats and anesthetized (Inactin) and surgically prepared rats. In conscious rats sodium excretion, as measured in a 1-h urine collection period after feeding or fasting overnight, was decreased with fasting with or without renal nerves. Renal nerve activity, as measured by norepinephrine turnover (inhibition of tyrosine hydroxylase by α-methyl-p-tyrosine), was not different between conscious fed or fasted rats and increased to the same extent in fed and fasted rats when anesthetized and surgically prepared. Anesthetized, surgically prepared rats infused with 5.0% glucose showed a denervation natriuresis if rats were fed overnight, but not if they had been fasted overnight. Potassium excretion in conscious and anesthetized rats was lower in fasted rats than fed rats with or without renal nerves. These data suggest (i) renal nerves are not involved in the renal response to an overnight fast in conscious rats, and (ii) in anesthetized, surgically prepared rats renal sympathetic tone is enhanced and denervation natriuresis occurs if rats are fed but not if fasted. Potassium excretion is a reflection of whether rats are fed or fasted and not whether they have renal nerves.Key words: kidney, fasting, sodium, renal nerves.
Publisher
Canadian Science Publishing
Subject
Physiology (medical),Pharmacology,General Medicine,Physiology
Cited by
2 articles.
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