BP Fluctuations and the Real-Time Dynamics of Renal Blood Flow Responses in Conscious Rats

Author:

Bidani Anil K.,Polichnowski Aaron J.,Licea-Vargas Hector,Long Jianrui,Kliethermes Stephanie,Williamson Geoffrey A.ORCID,Griffin Karen A.

Abstract

BackgroundRenal autoregulation maintains stable renal function despite BP fluctuations and protects glomerular capillaries from hypertensive injury. However, real-time dynamics of renal autoregulation in conscious animals have not been characterized.MethodsTo develop novel analytic methods for assessing renal autoregulation, we recorded concurrent BP and renal blood flow in conscious rats, comparing animals with renal autoregulation that was intact versus impaired (from 3/4 nephrectomy), before and after additional impairment (from the calcium channel blocker amlodipine). We calculated autoregulatory indices for adjacent short segments of increasing length (0.5, 1, 2.5, 5, 10, and 20 seconds) that exhibited a mean BP difference of at least 5 mm Hg.ResultsAutoregulatory restoration of renal blood flow to baseline after BP changes in conscious rats occurs rapidly, in 5–10 seconds. The response is significantly slower in states of impaired renal autoregulation, enhancing glomerular pressure exposure. However, in rats with severe renal autoregulation impairment (3/4 nephrectomy plus amlodipine), renal blood flow in conscious animals (but not anesthetized animals) was still restored to baseline, but took longer (15–20 seconds). Consequently, the ability to maintain overall renal blood flow stability is not compromised in conscious rats with impaired renal autoregulation.ConclusionsThese novel findings show the feasibility of renal autoregulation assessment in conscious animals with spontaneous BP fluctuations and indicate that transient increases in glomerular pressure may play a greater role in the pathogenesis of hypertensive glomerulosclerosis than previously thought. These data also show that unidentified mechanosensitive mechanisms independent of known renal autoregulation mechanisms and voltage-gated calcium channels can maintain overall renal blood flow and GFR stability despite severely impaired renal autoregulation.

Funder

National Institutes of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases

Department of Veterans Affairs

National Kidney Foundation of Illinois

American Society of Nephrology

American Heart Association

Publisher

American Society of Nephrology (ASN)

Subject

Nephrology,General Medicine

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