Affiliation:
1. From the Department of Physiology and Biophysics, University of Mississippi Medical Center, 2500 North State Street, Jackson, Miss.
Abstract
Studies were performed in intact male and female, gonadectomized male and female, and gonadectomized female rats given testosterone for 5 weeks to investigate the role played by testosterone in altered blood pressure control and pressure-natriuresis in male SHR. Serum testosterone levels reached a peak at 12 weeks of age in intact male SHR. Systolic blood pressure, measured weekly from 5 to 20 weeks of age, was similar between groups until 12 weeks of age when blood pressure became higher in males (195±3 mm Hg) than in females (168±3 mm Hg) or males castrated at 4 weeks (173±4 mm Hg). At 17 to 19 weeks direct measurement of arterial pressure in anesthetized rats confirmed that mean arterial pressure was higher in male (182±1 mm Hg) than in female (159±2 mm Hg) and castrated male SHR (159±2 mm Hg). In addition, testosterone (5 mg in Silastic pellets, SC for 5 weeks) administered to ovariectomized (ovx+T) females caused arterial pressure to increase by mm11% (175±2 mm Hg), which was significantly higher than in intact female, castrated male, or untreated ovariectomized (ovx) female SHR (158±2 mm Hg). Acute pressure-natriuresis was blunted in male SHR compared with females, castrated males, or ovx females, in which this relationship was similar. Pressure-natriuresis was also blunted in ovx+T females as found in intact male SHR. These data support the hypothesis that male sex hormones contribute to the exacerbation of hypertension in SHR by reducing pressure-natriuresis.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Cited by
274 articles.
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