Chronic vasodilation produces plasma volume expansion and hemodilution in rats: consequences of decreased effective arterial blood volume

Author:

Fekete Andrea12,Sasser Jennifer M.1,Baylis Chris13

Affiliation:

1. Departments of 1Physiology and Functional Genomics and

2. First Department of Pediatrics, Semmelweis University, Budapest, Hungary

3. Medicine, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida; and

Abstract

Plasma volume (PV) expansion is required for optimal pregnancy outcomes; however, the mechanisms responsible for sodium and water retention in pregnancy remain undefined. This study was designed to test the “arterial underfill hypothesis” of pregnancy which proposes that an enlarged vascular compartment (due to systemic vasodilation and shunting of blood to the placenta) results in renal sodium and water retention and PV expansion. We produced chronic vasodilation by 14 days administration of nifedipine (NIF; 10 mg·kg−1·day−1) or sodium nitrite (NaNO2; 70 mg·kg−1·day−1) to normal, nonpregnant female Sprague-Dawley rats. Mean arterial pressure, monitored by telemetry, was reduced by both NIF and NaNO2 but was unchanged in control rats. At day 14, vasodilator treatment lowered hematocrit and increased PV (determined by Evans blue dye dilution). Plasma osmolarity (Posm), sodium (PNa), and total protein concentrations all fell. These responses resemble the responses to normal pregnancy with hemodilution, marked PV expansion, and decreased Posmand PNa. Our previous work indicates a role of increased inner medullary phosphodiesterase-5 (PDE5) in the sodium retention of pregnancy. Here, we found that inner medullary PDE5A mRNA and protein expression were increased by both NIF and NaNO2 treatment vs. control; however, neither renal cortical nor aortic PDE5 expression was changed by vasodilator treatment. We suggest that a primary, persistent vasodilation drives increased inner medullary PDE5 expression which facilitates continual renal Na retention causing “refilling” of the vasculature and volume expansion.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology

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