Aberrant baroreceptor mechanotransduction in adult Dahl rats on low-salt diet

Author:

Andresen M. C.1,Rudis S. K.1,Bee D. E.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Physiology and Biophysics, University of Texas MedicalBranch, Galveston 77550.

Abstract

Single fiber, regularly discharging baroreceptors (n = 118) from adult Dahl salt-sensitive (DS) and salt-resistant (DR) rats on a low-salt diet were studied using an in vitro aortic arch-aortic nerve preparation. Pressure thresholds (Pth) and suprathreshold pressure sensitivities (Sth) were determined from responses to slow ramps of pressure. Pressure-diameter relationships measured in each rat were used to transform Pth and Sth values to their mechanical equivalents in terms of aortic wall strain. DS and DR ages were not different (approximately 50 wk). Despite the low-salt diet, DS tail systolic blood pressures were significantly higher than DR by approximately 25 mmHg. Pth averaged 84 mmHg in DR and 97 mmHg in DS. Sth values were similar in DR and DS (average 1.44 and 1.39 spikes.s-1.mmHg-1 in DR and DS, respectively). Increased variance of baroreceptor properties of DS over DR was a prominent finding and necessitated use of nonparametric statistics. The cumulative distribution of Pth values of DS was significantly different from DR, but Sth values were similar. Thus baroreceptor pressure set points are altered in adult DS, but pressure sensitivity per se is not. The differences in pressure parameters were not eliminated by conversion to their mechanical equivalents. Correlation analysis found only weak relationships between Pth and blood pressure for DS and DR (r less than 0.40). Thus in contrast to previous studies in the spontaneously hypertensive rat model, baroreceptors in adult DS on low salt are characterized by elevated variability and a weaker than expected correlation to the prevailing blood pressure in the animal.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology (medical),Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Physiology

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