Contribution of renal nerves to renal blood flow variability during hemorrhage

Author:

Malpas Simon C.12,Evans Roger G.3,Head Geoff A.1,Lukoshkova Elena V.1

Affiliation:

1. Baker Medical Research Institute, Prahran 3181;

2. Department of Physiology, University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand

3. Department of Physiology, Monash University, Clayton 3168, Victoria, Australia; and

Abstract

We have examined the role of the renal sympathetic nerves in the renal blood flow (RBF) response to hemorrhage in seven conscious rabbits. Hemorrhage was produced by blood withdrawal at 1.35 ml ⋅ min−1 ⋅ kg−1for 20 min while RBF and renal sympathetic nerve activity (RSNA) were simultaneously measured. Hemorrhage was associated with a gradual increase in RSNA and decrease in RBF from the 4th min. In seven denervated animals, the resting RBF before hemorrhage was significantly greater (48 ± 1 vs. 31 ± 1 ml/min intact), and the decrease in RBF did not occur until arterial pressure also began to fall (8th min); however, the overall percentage change in RBF by 20 min of blood withdrawal was similar. Spectral analysis was used to identify the nature of the oscillations in each variable. Before hemorrhage, a rhythm at ∼0.3 Hz was observed in RSNA, although not in RBF, whose spectrogram was composed mostly of lower-frequency (<0.25 Hz) components. The denervated group of rabbits had similar frequency spectrums for RBF before hemorrhage. RSNA played a role in dampening the effect of oscillations in arterial pressure on RBF as the transfer gain between mean arterial pressure (MAP) and RBF for frequencies >0.25 Hz was significantly less in intact than denervated rabbits (0.83 ± 0.12 vs. 1.19 ± 0.10 ml ⋅ min−1 ⋅ mmHg−1). Furthermore, the coherence between MAP and RBF was also significantly higher in denervated rabbits, suggesting tighter coupling between the two variables in the absence of RSNA. Before the onset of significant decreases in arterial pressure (up to 10 min), there was an increase in the strength of oscillations centered around 0.3 Hz in RSNA. These were accompanied by increases in the spectral power of RBF at the same frequency. As arterial pressure fell in both groups of animals, the dominant rhythm to emerge in RBF was centered between 0.15 and 0.20 Hz and was present in intact and denervated rabbits. It is speculated that this is myogenic in origin. We conclude that RSNA can induce oscillations in RBF at 0.3 Hz, plays a significant role in altering the effect of oscillations in arterial pressure on RBF, and mediates a proportion of renal vasoconstriction during hemorrhage in conscious rabbits.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology (medical),Physiology

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